On Sat, 30 Nov 2002 13:53:57 +0200 Abraham van der Merwe <abz@frogfoot.net> wrote: Thanks for the advice :-) > You don't need to add a route to get to 192.168.1.0/24 since you your > default gw will route packets to that network anyway. You are also use > 192.168.1.10 as a gateway to get onto the 1/24 network which won't > work (you can't use a machine on the network which you want to reach > as a gateway). You want to be using 192.168.2.10 as a gateway to get > onto the 1/24 network. Mmm, thought I had something upside down. > > Also, you can use unnumbered ppp. Just do this: > > On your home gateway's eth0 assign 192.168.2.10 and on your office's > side, assign 192.168.1.10 to eth1. Then use unnumbered ppp on both > sides and make sure that ip forwarding is enabled on the office gw. I don't quite follow how to set up unnumbered ppp. Should I just omit the local_ip:remote_ip in my ppp options file at home? > > On your office side, you'll have > > pppd ... 192.168.1.10:192.168.2.10 > > and on your home side, you'll have > > pppd ... defaultroute : > > Of course, you probably have /etc/ppp/* with the pon/poff scripts in > which case you need to add above to your /etc/ppp/peers/* scripts At the moment I have no scripts in place - I'm doing it manually to see what works and what I should eventually put in the scripts. I only have /etc/ppp/options on both sides. -- Roché Compaan Upfront Systems http://www.upfrontsystems.co.za _______________________________________________ LARTC mailing list / LARTC@mailman.ds9a.nl http://mailman.ds9a.nl/mailman/listinfo/lartc HOWTO: http://lartc.org/