We just went to replace the bridge/firewall services one one server with the same on another. It's pretty simple, and I literally cloned (w/ rsync) a third server that does this onto the one that will be the new one. Then copied the /etc/sysconfig/iptables from the one being replaced, and brought it up this morning. Nope. We had to put everything back the way it was. The new one sees the two or three servers behind the firewall, and we can ping them, from the new box. On one, we see IPP broadcasts; in fact, we see lots of broadcast packets using tcpdump. From outside, though, you can't see the servers. Trying to ping them, they see nothing. It seems to be the case that tcp and icmp packets are blocked, and we can't figure out why. CentOS 5.6. ifcfg-eth0 DEVICE=eth0 BRIDGE=br3 BOOTPROTO=dhcp HWADDR=aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:ff ONBOOT=yes ifcfg-eth1 DEVICE=eth1 BRIDGE=br3 HWADDR=aa:bb:cc:dd:ee:gg ONBOOT=yes ifcfg-br3 DEVICE=br3 ONBOOT=yes TYPE=Bridge BOOTPROTO=static IPADDR=<our ip> NETMASK=255.255.254.0 NETWORK=<our nw> GATEWAY=<our gw> Any ideas? mark _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos