Greetings, I'm not a newbie with Debian or with networking, so this problem has been extremely frustrating to me.
I have an old ThinkPad 760e with an Ositech Jack of Diamonds combo enet/modem card and an Lucent Orinoco gold card. I want to use the unit as a wireless "access point"--basically a router from the wireless ethernet onto my home network and from there out my DSL line to the Internet. I have successfully installed Debian unstable onto it and upgraded the kernel to 2.4.9. The ethernet adapter and the 802.11b adapter both work fine. The 802.11b adapter is in ad-hoc (aka "peer-to-peer") mode. This is the way my network is setup: DSL ------- Linux box --switch-- TP 760e --wireless-- Dell Latitude (w2k) Internet eth0: dsl eth1, ethernet: 802.11b: 192.168.2.2 192.168.1.151 eth1: 192.168.1.1 eth0, 802.11b: 192.168.2.1 The Thinkpad can ping the Linux box at 192.168.1.1 and it can ping the Latitude at 192.168.2.2. It can also reach the general Internet. The Latitude can ping the Thinkpad at both 192.168.2.1 and 192.168.1.151. It *cannot* however, ping the Linux box at 192.168.1.1 or reach the general Internet. IP forwarding is turned on. For various reasons I don't want to use masquerading--I would rather just route. However I was under the impression that this should "just work" without any setup other than ip_forwarding. Here's the routing table on the Thinkpad: Kernel IP routing table Destination Gateway Genmask Flags Metric Ref Use Iface 192.168.2.0 * 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 0 eth0 192.168.1.0 * 255.255.255.0 U 0 0 0 eth1 default 192.168.1.1 0.0.0.0 UG 0 0 0 eth1 What am I missing? I know it's something stupid. Thanks in advance! --cro [EMAIL PROTECTED]