William Knechtel wrote:
Yeah, the arp cache is the problem, thanks for nailing that one for me.
However, the ipfw rule you supplied doesn't seem to want to work for
me... I think for the time being I'll just run a cron job every 15
minutes or so that clears the arp cache completely. Thanks again
> From: William Knechtel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Yeah, the arp cache is the problem, thanks for nailing that
> one for me.
> However, the ipfw rule you supplied doesn't seem to want to work for
> me... I think for the time being I'll just run a cron job every 15
> minutes or so that clears th
help!! I really appreciate it!
Kindest Regards,
Bill
-Original Message-
From: Don Bowman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 29, 2003 7:33 PM
To: 'William Knechtel'; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Help with FreeBSD Bridged Firewall
> From: William Knechtel [mailto:[EM
> From: William Knechtel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
I think you need to allow arp through this device, something
like:
ipfw add 30 allow layer2 mac-type arp
[not sure which rule to insert it at].
I'm guessing your arp cache is timing out.
___
[EMAIL PRO
this helps figure out what's going on!! Thanks in advance for your
help.
Kindest Regards,
Bill
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of William Knechtel
> Sent: Tuesday, July 29, 2003 6:56 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
&g
Hello!
Help!! I'm running a PC with dual NICs and FreeBSD 4.8 for a bridged
firewall. I've got a private IP 10.0.0.1 tied to the internal card on the
box for remote management. The firewall blocks any 10.x traffic coming in on
the external card, so to remotely admin it, I have to shell into a mach