netfilter-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx scribbled on : > Hi all, > > I have two identical linux boxes (A e B), each one with two > interfaces: an ethernet (eth0 with ip 192.168.1.50) and an hdlc > (hdlc0). The two boxes are only connected via a link through their > hdlc interfaces. Because they have to be exactly the same, if I have > to assign an ip address to hdlc0 of A then the hdlc0 of B should have > the same ip address. Each one should have a default route that cannot > coincide with the hdlc interface. Every linux box has a web server. > When I connect with my notebook to box A I want to reach the web > server on A typing in my browser http://192.168.1.50 and I want to > reach web server on B typing http://192.168.1.50:8080 . > Some one knows how could it be possible? > > Thank you for your help, > Antonio. If Server A has IP 192.168.1.50, you *cannot* have a server B also on 192.168.1.50 in the samen LAN. You would have 1 IP address for multiple servers and that just isn't going to work. What you *can* do is : Server A = 192.168.1.50 Server B = 192.168.1.51 Forward requests to 192.168.1.50:8080 to 192.168.1.51(:8080 or whatever you like) Gr, Rob