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Full Discussion: Internet Sharing
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Internet Sharing Post 208 by Neo on Thursday 9th of November 2000 10:36:33 AM
Old 11-09-2000
PxT gave a good reply. I'll add a few things, perhaps it will be helpful Smilie

By your post, I assume that you want to have users connect to your servers/services via the Internet to save the cost of having a bunch of dial of lines; the model is very much the same (not exactly but good enough for your purposes) regardless of dial-out to the Internet of dial-in from the Internet. Either way requires connectivity to the Internet.

Before jumping off to books on VPNs, Firewalls, and complex HOWTOS, it is essential that you design architecture based on your actual needs (requirements). You may not need VPNs or even a complex firewall, if your model is simple enough. On the other hand, if your model is complex, you may need a lot of gear/gadgets/configurations.

Keep in mind that that technical people, often fascinated with the technology, forget that the more complex you design a network (any system) the more it costs to sustain, maintain, and keep secure. Every line in a configuration file increases the cost of operations and ownership.

Network management experts estimate that the costs of manageing a network (and the power of the network) goes up with the square of the number of nodes on the network (N SQUARED LAW).

In a nutshell, more important than technology buzzwords is a clear roadmap on what your company plans to do and the risk management requirements and business processes. The number one mistake that I see people make is 'too much technology' and not enough planning. Keeping costs down and acquiring a high return on investment requires investing time in planning and design before considering the technical options and marketplace buzz.




[Edited by Neo on 11-09-2000 at 11:31 AM]
 

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network-test(1) 						  ifupdown-extra						   network-test(1)

NAME
network-test - check the network and test if everything is fine SYNOPSIS
network-test DESCRIPTION
The network-test program will test your system's network configuration using basic tests and providing both information (INFO), warnings (WARN) and possible errors (ERR) based on the results of these tests. It will check and report on: * Status of the network interfaces of the system including: link status, IP addressing and number of transmitted packets and error rates. * Accessibility to configured routes to external networks, including the default network route, checking the routers configured to give access to the network * Proper host resolution, testing DNS resolution against a known host. * Proper network connectivity, testing reachability of remote hosts using ICMP and simulating a web connections to a remote web server (the web server used for the tests can be configured through the environment, see below) The program does not need special privileges to run as it does not do any system change. However, the behaviour of the program when running as an unprivileged user is not the same as running as system administrator (i.e. root). If the program is run as system administrator it will try to run some tools that are only available to it to speed up some of the tests. The program relies on the use of ip, netstat, ifconfig, arp and (when running as root) ethtool or mii-tool, to obtain information about the system's networking configuration (status of available interfaces and configured network routes). It also uses ping, host and nc (netcat) to do tests of the network connectivity and ensure that the host can connect to the Internet. ENVIRONMENT
The program will, by default, check www.debian.org and its associated web server. If you want to use a different check host you can setup the environment as follows: CHECK_HOST The name of a host to use when testing DNS resolution. CHECK_IP_ADRESS The IP address of the host defined in CHECK_HOST CHECK_WEB_HOST The web server to use for testing purposes when testing network connectivity. CHECK_WEB_PORT The web server port of server CHECK_WEB_HOST that will be used for testing. EXIT STATUS
The program will exit with error (1) if any of the network checks fail. BUGS
This program does not have super cow powers so it is unable to fix the errors by itself. It is also unable to detect if the network is failing due to a local firewall policy been in place so make sure you check your system logs with dmesg (1) to detect if some of the active tests are being dropped due to your local firewall. Other known issues that might make the program not work reliable are: * IPv6: The program does not yet explicitly handle IPv6 only hosts, some of the tests might be biased towards IPv4 and might fail in IPv6 environments. * Proxies: The program does not check network connectivity for hosts that connect through the Internet using a proxy gateway for services. The program might report issues in hosts using proxies even when these might connect to the Internet properly through proxied services. * Firewall environments: some of the tests rely on direct connectivity to external hosts, which are tested using ICMP queries (through the use of ping. These tests might fail in hosts installed in networking environments with firewalls that block outbound ICMP communication. SEE ALSO
ip (8), netstat (8), ifconfig (8), ethtool (8), mii-tool (8), ping (8), nc (1) and host (1). AUTHOR
network-test was written by Javier Fernandez-Sanguino for the Debian GNU/Linux distribution. COPYRIGHT AND LICENCE
Copyright (C) 2005-2011 Javier Fernandez-Sanguino <jfs@debian.org>. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later version. On Debian systems, a copy of the GNU General Public License may be found in /usr/share/common-licenses/GPL. ifupdown-extra August 23 2011 network-test(1)
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