On Sunday 21 March 2004 10:20, Sven Riedel wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Can anyone tell me how I can tell the machine which NIC is the primary?
If your looking for a way to determine which NIC is which then maybe
nameif(8) is what your looking for.
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Ole-Christian S. Hagenes
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On Sunday, 2004-03-21 at 03:17:45 -0800, Brandon High wrote:
> On Sun, Mar 21, 2004 at 11:58:00AM +0100, Lupe Christoph wrote:
> > > Can anyone tell me how I can tell the machine which NIC is the primary?
> > There is no such thing as a primary NIC. Unless a daemon explicitly
> > binds a socket to
On Sun, Mar 21, 2004 at 11:58:00AM +0100, Lupe Christoph wrote:
> > Can anyone tell me how I can tell the machine which NIC is the primary?
> There is no such thing as a primary NIC. Unless a daemon explicitly
> binds a socket to a specific IP address and send a packet through that
Could it be tha
On Sunday, 2004-03-21 at 10:20:06 +0100, Sven Riedel wrote:
> I'm struggeling with a problem on a multi-homed host running debian, and
> as the problem is somewhat security related, I hope you'll tolerate the
> question on this list :)
This isn't freebsd-security ;-)
> Anyway, the Host has an in
On Sun, Mar 21, 2004 at 10:20:06AM +0100, Sven Riedel wrote:
> I'm struggeling with a problem on a multi-homed host running debian, and
Well, it's not actually multi-homed. I'll bet both of your
NIC's are contained inside the same ASN and that they aren't even
running BGP ;-)
> Anyway, the Host h
On Sunday, 2004-03-21 at 03:17:45 -0800, Brandon High wrote:
> On Sun, Mar 21, 2004 at 11:58:00AM +0100, Lupe Christoph wrote:
> > > Can anyone tell me how I can tell the machine which NIC is the primary?
> > There is no such thing as a primary NIC. Unless a daemon explicitly
> > binds a socket to
Hi,
I'm struggeling with a problem on a multi-homed host running debian, and
as the problem is somewhat security related, I hope you'll tolerate the
question on this list :)
Anyway, the Host has an internal NIC and an external NIC (acting among
other things as a firewall). For some reason, all ser
On Sun, Mar 21, 2004 at 11:58:00AM +0100, Lupe Christoph wrote:
> > Can anyone tell me how I can tell the machine which NIC is the primary?
> There is no such thing as a primary NIC. Unless a daemon explicitly
> binds a socket to a specific IP address and send a packet through that
Could it be tha
On Sunday, 2004-03-21 at 10:20:06 +0100, Sven Riedel wrote:
> I'm struggeling with a problem on a multi-homed host running debian, and
> as the problem is somewhat security related, I hope you'll tolerate the
> question on this list :)
This isn't freebsd-security ;-)
> Anyway, the Host has an in
On Sun, Mar 21, 2004 at 10:20:06AM +0100, Sven Riedel wrote:
> I'm struggeling with a problem on a multi-homed host running debian, and
Well, it's not actually multi-homed. I'll bet both of your
NIC's are contained inside the same ASN and that they aren't even
running BGP ;-)
> Anyway, the Host h
Hi,
I'm struggeling with a problem on a multi-homed host running debian, and
as the problem is somewhat security related, I hope you'll tolerate the
question on this list :)
Anyway, the Host has an internal NIC and an external NIC (acting among
other things as a firewall). For some reason, all ser
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