On Jan 17, 2008 2:40 AM, kashani <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Mick wrote: > > > I agree that this is not related to the ISP. What you probably need to do > > is > > set up RIP2 in your router 1, to be able to recognize other subdomains > > (192.168.2.XXX). Then it'll process packets coming from that subdomain. > > The > > router manual ought to help you out on setting this up. > > <grumpy network engineer> > Sure let's make something simple really complicated. And sucky. > </> > > Is there some sort of dynamic routing happening on this network? > Different possible paths to get to machines? Links we might want to > balance traffic over? Other routers sending route updates? If not, then > why would we want the added complexity of a routing protocol? There are > all of two routes on this network and they never change. Static routing > is the right choice and functionally no different than if the route had > been inserted via a routing protocol. > > No routing protocol will make router1 NAT addresses it doesn't want > to. > Adding that subnet to the NAT list will, but that is outside the routing > table or it would have already worked.
Well, I had earlier tried enabling the RIP2 option in Router1 but no change in results. For the moment I have given up on this configuration. I am now trying to setup up the network as one segment only 192.168.1.x.. Using the Router2 in client mode is one option. Thanks for all the respones.. Sathish -- gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org mailing list