Date: Thu, 13 Nov 2014 15:06:57 +0000 From: krad <kraduk@gmail.com> To: Jon Radel <jon@radel.com> Cc: FreeBSD Questions <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: Static routing Message-ID: <CALfReyehG3LSNNT7kTU489Gp8JLJ9%2BLB_CWm9uRaJ_yEiF_V8w@mail.gmail.com> In-Reply-To: <54628179.10102@radel.com> References: <545BE713.9090705@gmail.com> <20141109203840.2949195f@morena.maps.net> <54626BDD.3070408@gmail.com> <54626FCB.5080904@radel.com> <54627A0C.6060701@gmail.com> <54628179.10102@radel.com>
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would you be trying to build a transparent L2 firewall/bridge by any chance? If so its nothing to do with routing as its all at layer2. Im not sure if the docs are uptodate but start here https://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/articles/filtering-bridges/arti= cle.html On 11 November 2014 21:36, Jon Radel <jon@radel.com> wrote: > On 11/11/14, 4:05 PM, "Dante F. B. Col=C3=B2" wrote: > >> >> Sorry, i forgot to mention ,the Cisco router has the ip >> 189.92.72.9/255.255.255.248, there is no bridgie configured on the >> Linux (Debian 5 and 6 kernel 2.6) machine ,i just setup these static >> routes to do that but i really don't know how the Linux TCP stack handle >> this, anyway thanks for your reply, i'm gonna try the bridge on freebsd >> and openbsd. >> >> No bridge on Linux. Hmmmmm..... You sure you aren't doing something > like this: http://www.sjdjweis.com/linux/bridging/ If nothing else the > network diagram looks a whole lot like yours..... > > --Jon Radel > jon@radel.com > >
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