[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: > Not sure if this is the right place for this, but I have a set of FreeBSD > 6.2 firewalls. They each have 3 interfaces in them. One interface > connects to the 10.94/16 network, the other connects the 192.168.4/24, > 192.168.5/24 and 192.168.8/24 networks. > > Here is a breakdown of the interfaces: > > BSD 1 > bge0 10.94.2.222/16 > xl0 "up" > xl1 "up" > vlan2 192.168.4.2/24 > vlan3 192.168.5.2/24 > vlan4 192.168.8.2/24 > carp1 10.94.2.221/16 > carp2 192.168.4.1/24 > carp3 192.168.5.1/24 > carp4 192.168.8.1/24 > > BSD 2 > bge0 10.94.2.223/16 > xl0 "up" > xl1 "up" > vlan2 192.168.4.3/24 > vlan3 192.168.5.3/24 > vlan4 192.168.8.3/24 > carp1 10.94.2.221/16 > carp2 192.168.4.1/24 > carp3 192.168.5.1/24 > carp4 192.168.8.1/24 > > BSD 1 is the current CARP master for all interfaces. For dhcrelay in > rc.conf I have: > dhcrelay_enable="YES" > dhcrelay_servers="10.94.2.204" # IP to MS Server 2003 DHCP server > dhcrelay_ifaces="bge0 vlan2 vlan3 vlan4" > dhcrelay_flags="-a" > > In MS Server 2003 there is a superscope defined with scopes for each > network (10.94/16, 192.168.4., 192.168.5., and 192.168.8.) > > The problem is, it doesn't seem like the BSD box is forwarding the DHCP > requests to the DHCP server. It will NOT get an address. If I manually > assign an IP address, the client talks fine to the other networks. > > There are no firewall/nat rules loaded at all.. PF is running but without > a rule set it defaults to allow all.. any ideas?
Run the relay agent in verbose mode and find out what it thinks is happening. _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"