Hi, Peter: En fecha Domingo, 15 de Mayo de 2011, peasth...@shaw.ca escribió: > * From: "Jesús M. Navarro" <jesus.nava...@undominio.net> > * Date: Sun, 5 Sep 2010 23:47:48 +0200 > > > There's neither "carnot" nor "Allied Telesis 3612TR" in your provided > > diagram so it's a bit difficult to follow you. It would be better if > > you provided a complete an up-to-date diagram. > > It's improved now. > http://carnot.yi.org/NetworksPage.html > Ref. Extant Network & Proposed Network. > > > If all my previous assumptions are right, then you need to configure an > > IP bridge between dalton's eth0 and eth1 [eth2 in the Proposed Network]. > > That's all. > > What are the greatest advantages in bridging eth0 and eth1 rather > than routing through Dalton to Carnot? Bridging will need some > additional software, bridge-utils; routing should be possible > without adding software.
It's been a long time but, as far as I seem to remember, you wanted to offer public services from behind dalton (I don't remember anymore why you wanted dalton as a choke point, maybe something related to monitoring or VPNs). Anyway, that's what bridges are for: to "patch together" to physical networks into a single IP network. For you "different IP networks" setup you will need to properly configure both NAT and routing which it's a bit more difficult than bridging. Cheers. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/201105152055.19550.jesus.nava...@undominio.net