Dave Ihnat wrote:
On Fri, Jul 13, 2007 at 08:11:51AM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
One possible issue here: you can't serve both address ranges via DHCP
and keep then separated on the same wire. In that scenario the DHCP
server can't distinguish any difference in the requests unless you
configure responses by MAC address. If one of the ranges has statically
assigned addresses, this isn't a problem.
Other services have problems, too; I think dynamic DNS may be upset at this,
for one.
Oh, and another thing--it's important to segregate what you may consider
acceptable in a small home network, and what would ever be acceptable in
a business or professional environment. I'd never advocate this outside
an experimental environment.
Personally, I'd be more concerned about using anything that might break
from an overlaid subnet in a production environment than the overlaid
subnet itself. But, in that situation you'd probably have VLAN capable
switches anyway.
--
Les Mikesell
lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx
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