I'm hoping that someone on this list can shed some light on how Linux/CentOS decides which IP address to report when a Windows desktop attempts to access it via SAMBA/WINS. The CentOS system in question is running a single NIC and OpenVPN which adds two additional virtual NICs. This is a backup system, there is another CentOS system that acts as the primary VPN server. The local NIC is 10.44.0.0/24, the virtual NICs are 10.55.5.0/24 and 10.55.6.0/24, respectively. If a Windows Desktop on the local network attempts to contact this CentOS server, it is given its 10.44.0.x address. If a Windows Desktop is VPN connected to the primary CentOS VPN server, with a 10.55.3.x address, it is given this CentOS server's 10.55.6.x address. It seems the IP address of the requester is being taken into account, perhaps looking for the closest subnet match? Ultimately I'd like the CentOS system to always report its 10.44.0.x address. Is there anyway to force this behavior? Brett _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos