As a company we have two t1's (greedy i know!)
the aaa.aaa.aaa.aaa address range is the external address's for one T1
xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx is the address range for the other T1
Does that make sense!
-----Original Message-----
From: Raymond Leach [mailto:raymondl@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: 12 March 2003 09:09
To: Netfilter Mailing List
Subject: Re: Today's Brain Teaser.
On Wed, 2003-03-12 at 10:35, Jonathan Humphrey wrote:
> I've been struggling with this one for some time, i am currently at
> the end of my teather so if anyone has any great ideas about why this
> happens let me know.
>
> Basically, i have a linux server that has three interfaces;
>
> eth1 aaa.aaa.aaa.202 External Facing network
> eth0 bbb.bbb.bbb.254 Internal protected network
> eth1:0 aaa.aaa.aaa.197 External IP Address for
> FTPServer
>
> I have a device that sits on xxx.xxx.xxx.5 that cannot get to any
> service on aaa.aaa.aaa.197, however every other ip address i have
> tried can. I suspect that if i release the real ip address of
> aaa.aaa.aaa.197 then everyone reading this list could too.
>
> And it's on the .5 address, if i try from xxx.xxx.xxx.15 i can
> connect.
Where is xxx.xxx.xxx.5? Is it on the internal or external network?
>
> Nothing is being show as dropped in the logs either.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Jonathan Humphrey
>
>
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