I would like to just zoom into my specific problem here : We have a HP Proliant 480C blade that comes with a HP Gbe2c Layer3 switch built in (ie you can't see the NIC of the blade server, only switch ports). It's VMWare ESX & we have just built one Windows client in it & now we have just installed a second guest client (a noncluster RHEL Ver 5.2) : a)we have succeeded in building a Windows guest client inside this VMWare ESX earlier. The Windows client has an IP addr 10.51.x.y & it uses the very same switch & is able to get connected to other LANs. From this Windows client, I'm able to ping to other external servers on other subnets & vice-versa. The Layer 3 switch could ping to the Windows client too b)We just installed Redhat Linux 5.2 inside the same VMWare, it's able to to boot up fine, just that it's unable to even reach the built-in Layer 3 switch: From this Layer3 switch, I'm able to ping to the Windows guest client 10.51.x.y but from this built-in Layer3 switch, I'm unable to ping to the Linux client (with vswif0 interface addr 172.17.y.z up & running) c) I then tried to configure an IP addr for eth2 (172.17.y.t) in this Linux client, restart network (shown as Ok for both vswif0 & eth2 during "/etc/init.d/network restart" but it did not help make (still unreachable) What's the problem here? The switch has one default VLAN1 in it - must I specify "tagging" during the Linux installation to this VLAN1 or I'll need to create another VLAN in the HP built-in switch or ...... ? Is there a firewall within Linux which could have prevented these connectivity & if so how do we disable it? Any ideas/brainstorming suggestions appreciated Thanks U -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list