10-09-2012
Your topology explanation is very messy. Could you please clear it out for us little bit so we could have better insight into your problem? What exactly are you trying to do, how and what hardware you are trying to do it on. Are you just trying scan the communication between two PCs with another computer in your network?
8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. IP Networking
I'm planning on putting together a chart of basic information (port number, protocol number, transport layer protocol, etc) on different protocols (FTP, ICMP, DNS, IP, etc)
I found:
http://www.phys-iasi.ro/Library/RFCs/rfc1700.htm
and that tells me a little bit of information but I'm looking... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: thmnetwork
3 Replies
2. IP Networking
iam doing a research on WAN so pliz any body can give me or tell me where i would find communication protocol map..thats all 7 layers..OIS MODEL (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ravineelkumar
1 Replies
3. Solaris
Hi ,
I am trying to configure a private LAN and corporate LAN on the same machien on Solaris 10.
How can I achieve this?
Thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: deedee
1 Replies
4. Solaris
Dear
i have installed Solaris 10 on SUN V240
after installation i can not access system through root user
if i access system through any other user it conects but root is not connecting through LAN
if i connect through SC and then access root though cosole -f command it also works
kindly... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: rizwan225
6 Replies
5. IP Networking
Hi,
We have a website running on a local centos 5.4 surfer, static IP.
The domain.com uses no-ip.com to take care of the DNS, it forwards all to my server.
My router receives the port 80 call, routes it to my server and the world can see domain.com perfectly fine.
However, we cannot see... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: lawstudent
3 Replies
6. Red Hat
I am facing strange problem regarding hostname on my Linux(2.6.18-164.el5xen x86_64 GNU/Linux), the hostname changes if reboot with lan cable and with NO lan cable
Reboot with lan cable:
The hostname is ubunut
Unable to connect Oracle database using sqlplus some times database is not... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: LinuxLearner
2 Replies
7. IP Networking
hi all,
i want to prevent users downloading files in the office as bandwidth becomes very low
and affects work.
one of my friend tried to close the connection using ethercap but this does not work.
i have a debian desktop while other users use MS W!ndows.
Please provide any help. Thanks (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: coolatt
5 Replies
8. IP Networking
Hello Forum Members,
I am siva ranganath from Hyderabad-India.
I have an work experince of 4.5 years as application developer and support member in open source systems.i am good basic network programing ie applications developing in TCP/IP and i have an experince of 1 year in this N/W... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: workforsiva
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
oidentd_masq.conf
oidentd_masq.conf(5) File Formats Manual oidentd_masq.conf(5)
NAME
oidentd_masq.conf - oidentd IP masquerading/NAT configuration file.
DESCRIPTION
If you are using IP masquerading or NAT, oidentd can optionally return a username for connections from other machines. Support for this is
specified by calling oidentd with the -m (or --masq) flag and by creating an /etc/oidentd_masq.conf file.
oidentd can also forward requests for an IP masqueraded connection to the machine from which connection originates by way of the -f option.
This will only work if the host to which the connection is forwarded is running oidentd with the -P (proxy) flag, or if the host's ident
daemon will return a valid reply regardless of the input supplied by and the address of the host requesting the info (some ident daemons
for windows do this, maybe others).
FORMAT
<IP Address|Hostname>[/<Mask>] <Ident Response> <System Type>
The first field contains the IP address or the hostname of a machine that IP masquerades through the machine on which oidentd runs. The
mask parameter can be either a network mask or a mask in CIDR notation. A mask of 24 is equivalent to 255.255.255.0, a mask of 16 is
equivalent to 255.255.0.0, etc.
The second field specifies the reply that oidentd will return for lookups to the host matching the IP address specified in the first param-
eter.
The third field specifies the operating system the machine matching the first parameter is running.
EXAMPLES
<Host>[/<Mask>] <Ident Response> <System Type>
192.168.1.1 someone UNIX
192.168.1.2 noone WINDOWS
192.168.1.1/32 user1 UNIX
192.168.1.0/24 user3 UNIX
192.168.0.0/16 user4 UNIX
somehost user5 UNIX
192.168.1.0/255.255.255.0 user6 UNIX
AUTHOR
Ryan McCabe <ryan@numb.org>
http://dev.ojnk.net
SEE ALSO
oidentd(8) oidentd.conf(5)
version 2.0.8 13 Jul 2003 oidentd_masq.conf(5)