Kendall, I'm sure you'll get all sorts of help here. There's a URL for IPMasq, which seems to be the firewalling technique of choice: http://ipmasq.home.ml.org/
One of the things you'll need to do is recompile the kernel; a key to doing that is make-kpkg, which I found referenced mainly in the FAQMatic as www.deb.org. I'm "in the process" myself. Good luck, Hank -----Original Message----- From: Kendall P. Bullen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, September 01, 1998 9:26 PM To: debian-user@lists.debian.org Subject: Best Debian-supported NICs? Also, firewalling help? Hiya, I'm setting up a machine to act as a firewall or router or something (not sure what the exact term is -- basically, to allow only certain Internet IPs to get to a machine that will be behind this firewall-or-whatever). As such, I was planning on two NICs and having a Debian system that does one thing -- pass along packets that should reach the machine-behind-the-iron-curtain, and not allow any others. My question for now is this: What're the best NICs supported by Debian? I can reprint the list here if people don't want to check, but are familiar with the NICs when named, if need be. I'm most familiar with 3com cards, and we use a few Intels as well. But I figure for this application, the speed and efficiency of the NIC is paramount, so I want the best that Debian supports, not just random cards that I'm familiar with or have used before. Side Note: If anyone has suggestions on how to implement what I want to implement, please let me know. :-) I have a feeling that it has to do with being a firewall and IP forwarding -- have just started looking at documentation, but any tips or suggestions would be appreciated, as the documentation tends to be arcane, it seems. Thanks in advance for NIC (or firewall/IP forwarding) advice! Kendall :-) -- Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null