On 8/21/06, Etaoin Shrdlu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
mm, I disabled it from auto loading.
gentoo might do that trick for me, everytime I check that value, it shows 1.
uh, that's a good idea, I'll emege wireshark and see what's happening, the most annoying thing is that there's no log for troubleshooting, I wonder why iptable never write anything to syslog? that's wierd.
On Monday 21 August 2006 16:22, fei huang wrote:
> still no luck... I tried to build everything in kernel, and later
> build additional iptable_filter as module, add iptable to my default
> run level,, neither of them works..
I'd try first with iptables filters *disabled*, to make sure it's not a
firewall issue. Once it works, enable packet filtering (if you need it).
But until you are sure it works, make sure nothing prevents traffic
flow, so disable iptables filters.
mm, I disabled it from auto loading.
> I found there is a warning message after emerge iptables says: ip
> forwarding is not included in iptables any more. what does it mean? is
> that related with the issue?
It means that, if you want ip forwarding, you have to enable it manually
using the command
echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
To verify that forwarding is working, simply do
cat /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
and it should print "1".
Keep in mind that if you reboot, you have to re-enable forwarding if you
want it again.
gentoo might do that trick for me, everytime I check that value, it shows 1.
Finally, run a network analyzer like wireshark and see for yourself
what's happening. I'd look at ARP packets first: make sure ARP is
working correctly.
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
uh, that's a good idea, I'll emege wireshark and see what's happening, the most annoying thing is that there's no log for troubleshooting, I wonder why iptable never write anything to syslog? that's wierd.
regards
daniel