"Steve Holden" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Bob Greschke wrote: > The reason that "binding to a specific address is almost never used for a > client" is because it's the server destination address that the network > layer will use to determine which interface is used to communicate with a > specific server host. > > Suppose your network setup looks like this: > > > +-------------------+------------------------+ Network A > | > | > | > | 192.168.12.34/24 > | > +--------+--------+ > | | > | | > | YOUR HOST | > | | > | | > +--------+--------+ > | > | 201.46.34.22/24 > | > | > | > +-------------------+----------+-------------+ Network B > | > + > +--------+--------+ > | router | > | to internet | > +-----------------+ > > If your client program tries to communicate with, say, 192.168.12.18 then > by the IP network layer will automatically select network A as the medium, > since the destination is local to that network. If you then want to > communicate the results to 201.46.34.118 then network B will be used, > again because the destination is local to that network (its first 24 bits > are the same as the first 24 bits of the destination). > > In this case the router on network B will almost certainly be the default > route for the host, as it's the way to everywhere else. > > This isn't really Python-related, so I hope it answers your question! > > regards > Steve > -- > Steve Holden +44 150 684 7255 +1 800 494 3119 > Holden Web LLC/Ltd http://www.holdenweb.com > Skype: holdenweb http://holdenweb.blogspot.com > Recent Ramblings http://del.icio.us/steve.holden >
Nice explanation! Thanks! You mean I don't have to do anything special?? That sounds suspiciously easy. :) To muddy the water a little the equipment I want to get info from (some seismic digitizing/recording equipment) comes back to us from the field with the IP addresses set to whatever that last user needed. What we do now is put the unit(s) on the bench, connect them to the private network and use a broadcast address (like 255.255.255.255) and a specific port number to query and see who is connected. Then we (a program) can get in (login, basically) and reset the all of the IPs to the same subnet to proceed with checkout, calibration, etc. We have to disconnect from (or disable the card for) the outside network when we do this discovery or else the program discovers all of these instruments that we have running in the building (monitoring a seismic pier, in people's offices, etc.). I'm guessing here we will still need to do this? It's not a biggie, but finding a way to not have to do this was what started this whole thing. Once the program knows which instruments it found on the private network it doesn't matter. It will only work on those ones. Thanks! Bob -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list