Hi Guillermo: No, I have the two machines (deb32 and deb64 are their hostnames) attached to the same router. The router is in front of me, the two machines behind the wall. The router (Xyxel Prestige 66H, ADSL 2+ 4 Port Gateway) is connected to ADSL, which line is separated by the teleph line by a filter.
That means that the two machines face a firewall barrier, to which I can't renounce because the two machine have to play together for jobs that may last many days uninterruptly. And I need access, during the job, to internet from deb32. Obviously, the two machines have an apparent identical ID under such conditions, and I don't know if their inernal private addresses exist and how they can be accessed and exploited. I found that the two machines - under the above conditions - differ for the "inet addr" (as it can be derived by the root commanf "ifconfig"). Which differ by one digit and can change from login to login, though probably it depends on which machine gets connected first to internet, which can be regulated so that each machine has always the same inet addr. Therefore the "inet addr" That seems to be exploiable for "slogin" from one machine to another one (the hostnames are not, as they are not defined on /etc/hosts, and cannot be defined because of the dynamic - and behind router - ID discussed). Probably I am discovering hot water, though I have not completed the connection because not all keys are yet in place. Probably one has to connect from deb32 to deb64 as root, under the above conditions. What I suspect, is that there is a proved protocol for getting to work INTERACTIVELY for long periods two machines under the above described conditions. This is why I hope to get suggestions. I must say that I alraedy got very useful suggestions from the debian science list, though the task is not completed yet. Regards francesco --- Guillermo Garron <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Ok, I am not understanding you well, I will try to > make a graph and > please tell me if that is what you have. > > Home PC > <---------------->router<-----Internet--------->router<------->office > PC > 10.1.1.1 10.1.1.2 4.2.2.2 > 166.114.10.10 10.1.1.2 10.1.1.1 > > the IPs i am using are just examples, but if I > understand you well , > you seems to have the same IP on you Home PC and at > your office PC > right? is this schema in order? please confirm. > > best regards, > > --- Please avoid top posting. > > Guillermo Garron > "Linux IS user friendly... It's just selective about > who its friends are." > (Using FC6, CentOS4.4 and Ubuntu 6.06) > http://feeds.feedburner.com/go2linux > http://www.go2linux.org > > > ____________________________________________________________________________________ Never Miss an Email Stay connected with Yahoo! Mail on your mobile. Get started! http://mobile.yahoo.com/services?promote=mail -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]