Terrence Brannon wrote: > I have a Debian/testing machine connected to the internet via our > wireless lan.
Check. > I want to put another machine on the internet which requires physical > ethernet instead of wireless. This other machine has only a wired network card, right? > Besides buying a wireless bridge, is there some way for the connected > machine to provide internet connectivity for this other machine? Yes. Very easily as a matter of fact. Install a wired network card in the same machine that currently has a wireless network connection. It can gateway the data to your wired network. In this mode it will function as a router. The wireless interface will be the WAN connection and the wired interface will be the LAN connection. You could also have it function as a firewall for the wired network. It really is just about as easy as configuring both network interfaces and then turning on internet packet forwarding between the interfaces. But you will almost certainly want to install some other things such as a DHCP server on your wired network. So let me outline a simple plan for you. * Install a wired network card as the second network interface. * Configure the second wired network card with a static IP address. Use a different subnet than you have on our WAN side. That is, if you have a 10.* address use 192.168.1.1 on the LAN. If your outside address is already 192.168.* then use 10.0.0.1 on your LAN side. Just make sure they are different. * Install and configure DHCP for your LAN interface. This is probably the most complicated part of the problem. But not overly so. * Ensure that packet forwarding is in place. Use either a firewall package or do this yourself with low level commands. echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward * Connect everything up. Have your other wired machine DHCP an address. Test connectivity. Ask more questions as you need them. Bob
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