聲gel Carrasco, 2002-Oct-25 08:36 +0200: > I cannot do it because, the big router has a little bandwidth only used by > these servers. > > I try to use the office network to give internet all rest. > > > And the second, I would have to do NAT because, each router only manages his > range.
Well, I'm having trouble visualizing your network. This is what I invision at the moment: ISP(213.250.143.241)---BigRouter(213.250.143.242) | | |_Office(172.16.16.1) | |_Web(172.16.8.1) |_Service(172.16.4.1) Based on this, the default route on the BigRouter must be to 213.250.143.241 and not 172.16.16.254. The other, as you mention, you must be doing NAT on the BigRouter for the 172.x networks. The problem with using the Office network for Internet access is that it doesn't have a legal address to use for sending traffic to the Internet. It can't traverse the 172.16.16.0 network to the BigRouter to get to the Internet unless you have a tunnel between the two routers using legal addresses. Also, if the Web router has a default route to the BigRouter, you may have a routing loop. Let me know if the diagram is off. jc -- Jeff Coppock Systems Engineer Diggin' Debian Admin and User -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]