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Date:      Wed, 3 Mar 2004 18:15:51 +0800
From:      Robert Storey <y2kbug@ms25.hinet.net>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   what is my real address?
Message-ID:  <20040303181551.104d2ce6.y2kbug@ms25.hinet.net>

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I've set up a FreeBSD client at our school. The client gets its address
via dhcp from the gateway machine which runs Windows NT (yuch!). There
is apparently a proxy server installed which blocks http, but I can get
out onto the Internet using ssh to login to another server, from where I
run lynx if I want to visit web sites. ftp is not blocked, so I can
download if I need to.

For run, I would like to run an ftp server on this client machine. For
that, I would need to know my real address on the web, but I am not sure
how to find this info. If I run ifconfig, it tells me the following:

  inet addr: 10.0.0.10
  Bcast: 10.0.0.31
  Mask 255.255.255.224

I can safely assume that 10.0.0.10 is an internal address for this
network. I've been pouring through the *BSD documentation I have hoping
to find a command that will tell me the address I occupy on the
Internet, but so far I haven't found anything. I'm sure the answer is
simple, but no joy so far - I'd be grateful if somebody could clue me
in.

A related question...I do realize that my address could change everytime
I fire up the client machine. I'm wondering if I can deal with that by
using dyndns? Remember, this would be for an anonymous ftp server, not
http.

Thanks in advance,
Robert



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