On Monday 02 October 2006 10:18, Grant wrote about 'Re: [gentoo-user] Router 3rd and 4th net interface problem': > > > > I'm pretty confused. I'm trying to get the system in question to > > > > behave like a solid-state router that you can plug an ethernet > > > > jack into and be on the network. FYI, that doesn't require the router to have a unique IP. You could simply configure each router port as a separate subnet, if you really wanted to. > > > > How should eth1 and eth2 be > > > > configured in /etc/conf.d/net ? > > > They should be configured as part of a bridge device (see the > > > bridging section of /etc/conf.d/net.example) and have the address > > > assigned (and DHCPD listing on) that bridge device. > > Except that this doesn't work on WLAN (MAC layer done by the WLAN > > adapter). eth1 and eth2 are both wired, no? How does 802.11a/b/g come into this? > > But probably "proxy_arp" can help here. And subnet > > separation, of course. Just extending the netmask a bit and enabling > > proxy_arp would do the job. OTOH, it's also easy to configure the > > routes to the other subnets via DHCP. Just a matter of taste. In any > > case, it only works on IP layer. I must admit that I've never used proxy_arp, but all ARP traffic occurs at the ethernet layer, below the IP layer, so it doesn't make sense to me for an option/program so named to only work on IP traffic. ARP is also only used intra-subnet, so this entire section doesn't make much sense to me. In *any* case, it's extremely unlikely that the OP is going to be carrying any significant amount of non-IP traffic. I feel that is an extraordinary enough condition to be mentioned. > I've never used a switch before. Is there any proprietary software to > configure (like with a router), or is it just a button or two? Generally a switch will have no configurable software; if it has anything worth configuring the manufacturer will call it a router and add 10-15$ to the price tag. In any case, I doubt you'll find a switch that supports 802.11a/b/g, since they will always require a little bit of configuration (ESSID and keys). You could get a wireless router (e.g. Linksys' WRT line), but they will have some software configuration. If you choose the right model, it'll be Linux instead of proprietary software. However, I know of no wireless routers that come from the manufacturer with Gentoo installed. In fact, I'm fairly sure that Gentoo doesn't provide any profiles, support, or even instructions for running on such hardware, which has severe [compared to a desktop] hw limitations. -- "If there's one thing we've established over the years, it's that the vast majority of our users don't have the slightest clue what's best for them in terms of package stability." -- Gentoo Developer Ciaran McCreesh