At Friday, 2 January 2004, Antony Gelberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >On Fri, Jan 02, 2004 at 10:46:06AM -0500, Debian User wrote: >> in a previous post, i asked this question but not sure if an answer >> was found ... >> >> >> i am trying to set up a network in my office at work. >> >> +---------------+ +---------------+ >> | 192.168.1.100 |-----| 192.168.1.1 | >> | 255.255.255.0 | | 255.255.255.0 | +---------------+ >> +---------------+ | 10.20.1.158 |---| 10.20.4.48 | >> | 255.255.0.0 | | 255.255.0.0 | >> +---------------+ +---------------+ >> >> the 192.168.1.100 machine can ping the 192.168.1.1 and 10.20.1.158 >> interface but not the 10.20.4.48 interface. the 10.20.1.158 interface
>> can ping the 10.20.4.48 interface. >> >> my routing table is as follows: >> >> dest gateway genmask flags metric ref use iface >> 192.186.1.0 * 255.255.255.0 u 0 0 0 eth1 >> 10.20.0.0 * 255.255.0.0 u 0 0 0 eth0 >> default 10.20.4.48 0.0.0.0 ug 0 0 0 eth0 >> >> >> >> any suggestions as to what i am doing wrong? > >Not turning on IP routing? cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward. If it's >0, routing is off. > >I suppose TDW for this is to set ip_forward=1 in /etc/network/options. >What this does is effectively echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward > >A right ... forgot about that. when i ping 10.20.4.48 from 192.168. 1.100, the requests time out. this tells me that there is a route to the host ... if this matters. anyway, i am still unable to reach 10.20.4.48 from 192.168.1.100. anything else? -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]