udo waechter wrote: > > If only one Interface is up (no matter which one) I can not only reach > the IP adress of that interface but also the other IP Adress which is > not assigned to any computer in the subnet. It also works vice-versa. > When both cards are down, none of the two IPs are reachable (via ping or > ssh or so)
Well that would make sense. If the interfaces are down, how can you get to them? > Yes, that was also my thinking when we got the first machine with two > interfaces. The solution that we have no is to assign each of the > interfaces a different subdomain and then make all the clients for our > co-workers usee one domain, and all computers which are used by students > use the other sub-domain. Having this a route for each of the > interfaces, things are ok again, or aren't they? > As I understand it, traffic coming in on eth0 is recognized by the > kernel as such and it knows that an answer has to be sent via eth0. or > is this false? Yup, this should work fine and is the easiest way of doing it if you don't care about having multiple subnets. > What exactly is psplit-routing? These guys explain it so much better than I could in a short email: http://lartc.org/howto/lartc.rpdb.multiple-links.html Best regards, -- George Borisov DXSolutions Ltd
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