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Date:      Tue, 14 Sep 1999 20:41:40 +0300
From:      Ruslan Ermilov <ru@ucb.crimea.ua>
To:        elazich@AlaskaAir.com
Cc:        freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: IPFW & NATD
Message-ID:  <19990914204140.C19867@relay.ucb.crimea.ua>
In-Reply-To: <msg1223309.thr-894a72.4c526e@alaskaair.com>; from elazich@AlaskaAir.com on Tue, Sep 14, 1999 at 10:22:11AM -0700
References:  <msg1219643.thr-894a72.4c526e@alaskaair.com> <19990913210504.D88685@relay.ucb.crimea.ua> <msg1220105.thr-894a72.4c526e@alaskaair.com> <19990913212704.A98610@relay.ucb.crimea.ua> <msg1220314.thr-894a72.4c526e@alaskaair.com> <msg1223309.thr-894a72.4c526e@alaskaair.com>

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On Tue, Sep 14, 1999 at 10:22:11AM -0700, elazich@AlaskaAir.com wrote:
> This morning I checked my arp table and find the following just after I
> have pinged (or do you say pung, proper english would seem to dictate
> the latter) 10.0.0.2 on my internal subnet;
> 
> capricorn# arp -a
> ? (10.0.0.2) at (incomplete)
> static-134-129.dsl.cnw.net (207.149.134.129) at 0:0:c:6a:78:c
> ns1.loopback.com (207.149.134.143) at 0:80:29:68:52:c4 permanent
> capricorn#
> 
> I also noticed in te results of a "dmesg" that 10.0.0.2 had resolved to
> a NIC card which I don't see on my local network, the actual message
> was something to the effect that the physical address for 10.0.0.2 was
> resolved by lnc1 (which is my ecternal NIC).   Again, the other clients
> on my internal net can ping each other fine but my firewall box cannot
> ping or be pinged by the internal clients save for pinging itself. 
> This appears to be HW address related but I'm not sure why, can anyone
> shed some light on this?  My IPFW ruleset again is;
> 
> >capricorn# ipfw sho
> >00100  9001 2506073 divert 8668 ip from any to any via lnc1
> >00200 12293 2895085 allow ip from any to any
> >65535    45    7436 deny ip from any to any
> >capricorn#
> 
> and my ifconfig output is;
> 
> >capricorn# ifconfig -a
> >vx0: flags=8843<UP,BROADCAST,RUNNING,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST> mtu 1500
> >        inet 10.0.0.1 netmask 0xffffff00 broadcast 10.0.0.255
> >        ether 00:a0:24:bd:f8:af

As I told you before, the netmask on this interface is not set up
properly, it should be 0xff000000 (of course, if it's not intentional)!

[...]
> 
> Any help is greatly appreciated.
> 
> Eli

HTH,
-- 
Ruslan Ermilov		Sysadmin and DBA of the
ru@ucb.crimea.ua	United Commercial Bank,
ru@FreeBSD.org		FreeBSD committer,
+380.652.247.647	Simferopol, Ukraine

http://www.FreeBSD.org	The Power To Serve
http://www.oracle.com	Enabling The Information Age


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