On Fri, 11 Nov 2005, Joe S wrote:
> >> SBC equipment with an OpenBSD box. Get the WAN IP from SBC's tech, or
> > this is trivial to do. I run SBC static and use OpenBSD for PPPoE and pf.
>
> This *should* be simple, but it's not. SBC no longer provides WAN IPs
> for home users that want static.
>
On 11/11/05, Joe S <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> >> SBC equipment with an OpenBSD box. Get the WAN IP from SBC's tech, or
>
> > this is trivial to do. I run SBC static and use OpenBSD for PPPoE and
> pf.
>
> This *should* be simple, but it's not. SBC no longer provides WAN IPs
> for home users tha
SBC equipment with an OpenBSD box. Get the WAN IP from SBC's tech, or
this is trivial to do. I run SBC static and use OpenBSD for PPPoE and pf.
This *should* be simple, but it's not. SBC no longer provides WAN IPs
for home users that want static.
You get a a single block of "sticky" IPs. A
At 04:48 PM 11/11/2005, Greg Thomas wrote:
On 11/11/05, Joe S <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I have new static IP ADSL service from SBC. SBC assigns a /29 netblock
> once authenticated via PPPoE. The ISP routes all traffic for the IP
> block down the same PPP session, and the last usable IP is th
On 11/11/05, Joe S <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I have new static IP ADSL service from SBC. SBC assigns a /29 netblock
> once authenticated via PPPoE. The ISP routes all traffic for the IP
> block down the same PPP session, and the last usable IP is the gateway.
> I plan to assign the static IPs
I have new static IP ADSL service from SBC. SBC assigns a /29 netblock
once authenticated via PPPoE. The ISP routes all traffic for the IP
block down the same PPP session, and the last usable IP is the gateway.
I plan to assign the static IPs to some of my servers.
I'm not sure how to setup th
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