Thanks for the reply. What I need to do is have the windows clients on the LAN side (192.168.100.0/24) be able to access a shared directory on a win2000server box on the WAN side (10.x.x.0/24) and still preserve my Linux masq. I cannot change the IP's on the WAN side with the exception of the masqing machine as they are remotely administrated.
thanks, tony Glen Lee Edwards wrote: > > May 9, at 18:26, tony mollica sent through the Star Gate: > > >Hello. I have a mixed network of Linux (Debian) and windows > >machines in the arrangement below. > > _______ ______ ______ > > | | | | | | > >--->|router |----| Linux|----|switch|---(192.168.x.x network) > > T1 |_______| |______| |______| > > | > > eth1 eth0 > > WAN IP Masq Machine LAN > > > >Real IP addresses on the router side with the > >192.168.x.x on the switch side. I need to put > >a another box on the router side but still > >have the internal LAN clients access this > >computer from the inside. The new computer > >is required to be windows, and there will be > >only windows clients accessing it. > > How you configure it will depend on what you need to use it for, and if you > have > a single dynamic IP address (which is assigned to the router) or a static > subnet > from your ISP. > > Most likely you have a dynamic address for your router. In that case, the WAN > side of the router gets that address, the LAN side is most likely assigned > something in the 10.0.0.x range. You can have the router do this, or you can > assign the IP addresses yourself - 10.0.0.1 to the LAN side of the router, > 10.0.0.2 to eth0 on the Linux box, and 10.0.0.3 to the new Windows box. Then, > in Linuxconf, set up your routes to other hosts to show that to get to the new > Windows box routing has to go through the 10.0.0.x subnet. > > Glen -- tony mollica [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]