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Date:      Fri, 23 Mar 2007 12:22:25 -0700
From:      Chuck Swiger <cswiger@mac.com>
To:        David Banning <david@skytracker.ca>
Cc:        questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: how utilize several IP's on one line
Message-ID:  <12335A7C-91A9-46D5-BA81-FC2F5EF8FD61@mac.com>
In-Reply-To: <20070323184751.GA45705@skytracker.ca>
References:  <20070323164024.GA1885@skytracker.ca> <1D15D7F6-E24E-4F5A-BB55-FBCE13076F25@mac.com> <20070323184751.GA45705@skytracker.ca>

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On Mar 23, 2007, at 11:47 AM, David Banning wrote:
>> Connect the DSL modem to a switch or hub, and connect several
>> machines to that, each configured statically to use the /29 subnet
>> which your ISP is making available to you.
>>
>> This is assuming your DSL modem deals with any PPPoE/PPPoA login
>> stuff itself...if not, you might have to get a broadband router or
>> config a FreeBSD box to do the PPPoE stuff and then route the subnet
>> internally (perhaps using RFC-1918 addresses via natd & the
>> redirect_address directive).
>
> Very helpful. Thanks Chuck.  What decides which IP will go to each  
> machine?

You do.  :-)

You can either statically configure each machine based on the network  
config info your ISP provides, or you can even set up DHCP + static  
IP configs using dhcpd and let automatic network config help out.   
It's easier to configure a FreeBSD machine to provide static IPs via  
DHCP than to do so on most "network appliance" style broadband routers.

> The router? If so what kind of router is that called?  What is the  
> term
> I can search google on this to learn more?

"broadband router".  D-link, Linksys, and others make 'em-- I've got  
an 8-port Linksys BEFSR81 which works just dandy for my purposes.

-- 
-Chuck




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