I suppose you have multiples interfaces on your 192.168.1.10. Normally,
you have multiple IP addresses on your 192.168.1.10, one address for
each interface. If you bridge interfaces, all your interfaces will have
one and only one IP address 192.168.1.10. If you prefer, your machine
(192.168.1.10) will work as switch.
You can see the beginning of this article (no need to use the firewall
part, use only D1 or D2 depending on your configuration):
http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/securing-debian-howto/ap-bridge-fw.en.html
Search also on google with "debian+bridge". I'm french and I have many
links but only in my language.
HTH, Christophe
Volkan YAZICI a écrit :
On Fri, 22 Aug 2008, Bonnel Christophe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Why don't you bridge the interfaces of 192.168.1.10?
I don't have in depth experience with bridging, would you mind
explaining a little bit about it please. (Example tutorial pointers will
be appreciated.)
In that case, you need to reconfigure client to point to 192.168.1.20
and you can sniff your network via the 192.168.1.10 machine?
What I really need is not spoofing, I need to somehow redirect identical
network traffic to a second machine. Applications are running on
Microsoft Windows Servers on 1.2 and 1.20. Is bridging in the way you
mentioned capable of doing such a thing?
Regards.
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