Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Routing between two LAN
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Routing between two LAN Post 6524 by haha25 on Thursday 6th of September 2001 06:36:50 AM
Old 09-06-2001
It seems that u need a router or gateway to connect ur two lans.
I don't know how to setup a UNIX box as a gateway, but i ever did it in a windows.
In ur case, Lan1 is connected to internet through router and set NAT in the router or fireware.
Lan2 is another lan which u want to connect to internet.
U can setup a windows with two nics, lets call it Gateway. First nic is nicA, the second one is nicB.
Connect nicA in lan1, assign it the ip address and default gateway of lan1.
Connect nicB in lan2, assign it the ip address of lan2, leave the default gateway blank.
Install Winroute in ur Gateway, inside Winroute, enable NAT in nicA.
Set all other computers in lan2 to use the ip address of nicB as their default gateway.
Then all computers in lan2 can connect internet through the Gateway.


I am very interesting in how to setup a UNIX box as a gateway and enable NAT, any one can give me an example? Thanks
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Wireles Lan...

Someone know how to configure a Wireles NetWork Card (PCI Adapter) on Solaris 10 OS? After install the correct driver, what must i have to do? I´m a client desktop and i´m obrigatory to put an IP to get conection whith Server... Thanks... Help me please... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: marpin
0 Replies

2. Solaris

How to configure private LAN and coporate LAN on the same machine-Solaris10

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

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

lan setting

heyyy im using ferdora 7 ...but systems on my lan have windos xp ..so im able to access those systems but they r not can u help me out.... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mightypp.nits
1 Replies

4. Linux

lan help

iam using open suse 10.3 in dual boot with windows internet is through Lan(ethernet) in windows by entering below data in Lan properties net is coming the information is bellow ip 10.2.45.67 subnet 255.255.0.0 default gate way 10.1.1.4... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: seshumohan
3 Replies

5. IP Networking

Local Lan, no-ip directed DNS forward, surf within lan

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

Different hostnames with reboot while lan cable, no lan cable

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

lan

how can i make lan between two or more computers having linux fedora as os...? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Ravi Kumar Mish
1 Replies

8. Fedora

about lan

how can i lan between two or more computers having linux fedora as os? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Ravi Kumar Mish
1 Replies

9. IP Networking

Routing traffic problem between 3G and Office Lan Network

Hi, I would like to ask some networking solution regarding my work LAN and 3G usb network problem. I want to route my internet traffic to the 3G network and sometimes connect to some of my work network for ssh to configure some workstation or print something. Currently my problem is i can't... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: jao_madn
0 Replies

10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Routing issue - local vs LAN

hi guys suse 11 SP1 x64 I have a server (4 NIC ports 192.168.100.100-103) that connects point to point to a storage device (same thing 4 ports 192.168.110.100-113) but this server connects to normal LAN 10.6.100.x - gateway 10.6.100.1 the issue is when testing connectivity to the storage... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: karlochacon
7 Replies
BATMAND(8)						      System Manager's Manual							BATMAND(8)

batmand(8)						      System Manager's Manual							batmand(8)

NAME
batmand - better approach to mobile ad-hoc networking SYNOPSIS
batmand [options]interface[interface...] DESCRIPTION
B.A.T.M.A.N means better approach to mobile ad-hoc networking, this is a new routing protocol for multi-hop ad-hoc mesh networks. Go to http://www.open-mesh.net/ to get more information. The following document will explain how to use the batman daemon. The batmand binary can be run in 2 different ways. First you need to start the daemon with "batmand [options] interface" (daemon mode) and then you can connect to that daemon to issue further commands with "batmand -c [options]" (client mode). Some of the options below are always available, some are not. See the example section to get an idea. OPTIONS
-a add announced network(s) Add networks to the daemons list of available connections to another network(s). This option can be used multiple times and can be used to add networks dynamically while the daemon is running. The parameter has to be in the form of ip-address/netmask. -A delete announced network(s) Delete networks to the daemons list of available connections to another network(s). This option can be used multiple times and can only be used while the daemon is running. The parameter has to be in the form of ip-address/netmask. -b run debug connection in batch mode The debug information are updated after a period of time by default, so if you use "-b" it will execute once and then stop. This option is useful for script integration of the debug output and is only available in client mode together with "-d 1" or "-d 2". -c connect via unix socket Use this option to switch to client mode. Deploy it without any arguments to get the current configuration even if changed at run- time. -d debug level The debug level can be set to five values. default: 0 -> debug disabled allowed values: 1 -> list neighbors 2 -> list gateways 3 -> observe batman 4 -> observe batman (verbose) 5 -> memory debug / cpu usage Note that debug level 5 can be disabled at compile time. -g gateway class The gateway class is used to tell other nodes in the network your available internet bandwidth. Just enter any number (optionally followed by "kbit" or "mbit") and the daemon will guess your appropriate gateway class. Use "/" to separate the down- and upload rates. You can omit the upload rate and batmand will assume an upload of download / 5. default: 0 -> gateway disabled allowed values: 5000 5000kbit 5mbit 5mbit/1024 5mbit/1024kbit 5mbit/1mbit -h short help -H verbose help -o orginator interval in ms A node transmits broadcast messages (we call them originator message or OGM) to inform the neighboring nodes about it's existence. Originator interval is the time to wait after sending one message and before sending the next message. The default value is 1000 ms (1 second). In a mobile network, you may want to detect network changes very quickly, so you need to send message very often, for example, use a value of 500 ms. In a static network, you can save bandwidth by using a higher value. This option is only available in daemon mode. -p preferred gateway Set the internet gateway by yourself. Note: This automatically switches your daemon to "internet search modus" with "-r 1" unless "-r" is given. If the preferred gateway is not found the gateway selection will use the current routing class to choose a gateway. -r routing class The routing class can be set to four values - it enables "internet search modus". The daemon will choose an internet gateway based on certain criteria (unless "-p" is specified): default: 0 -> set no default route allowed values: 1 -> use fast connection 2 -> use stable connection 3 -> use fast-switch connection XX -> use late-switch connection In level 1, B.A.T.M.A.N tries to find the best available connection by watching the uplinks throughput and the link quality. In level 2, B.A.T.M.A.N compares the link quality of the internet node and chooses the one with the best link quality. In level 3, B.A.T.M.A.N compares the link quality of the internet node and chooses the one with the best link quality but switches to another gateway as soon as a better connection is found. In level XX (number between 3 and 256) B.A.T.M.A.N compares the link quality of the internet node and chooses the one with the best link quality but switches to another gateway as soon as this gateway has a TQ value which is XX better than the currently selected gateway. -s visualization server Since no topology database is computed by the protocol an additional solution to create topology graphs has been implemented, the vis server. Batman daemons may send their local view about their single-hop neighbors to the vis server. It collects the information and provides data in a format similar to OLSR's topology information output. Therefore existing solutions to draw topology graphs developed for OLSR can be used to visualize mesh-clouds using B.A.T.M.A.N. -v print version --disable-client-nat Since version 0.3.2 batmand uses iptables to set the NAT rules on the gateX interface of the batman client (-r XX). That option dis- ables this feature of batmand and switches the internet tunnel mode to "half tunnels" (the packets towards the gateway are tunneled but not the packets that are coming back) unless NAT was enabled manually. Be sure to know what you are doing! Without NAT the gate- way needs to have a route to the client or the packets will be dropped silently. --policy-routing-script This option disables the policy routing feature of batmand - all routing changes are send to the script which can make use of this information or not. Firmware and package maintainers can use this option to tightly integrate batmand into their own routing poli- cies. This option is only available in daemon mode. EXAMPLES
batmand eth1 wlan0:test Start batman daemon on interface "eth1" and on alias interface "wlan0:test" batmand -o 2000 -a 192.168.100.1/32 -a 10.0.0.0/24 eth1 Start batman daemon on interface "eth1" with originator interval of 2000 ms while announcing 192.168.100.1 and 10.0.0.0/24. batmand -s 192.168.1.1 -d 1 eth1 Start batman daemon on interface "eth1", sending topology information to 192.168.1.1 and with debug level 1 (does not fork into the background). batmand eth1 && batmand -c -d 1 -b Start batman daemon on interface "eth1". Connect in client mode to get the debug level 1 output once (batch mode). batmand -g 2000kbit/500kbit eth1 && batmand -c -r 1 Start batman daemon on interface "eth1" as internet gateway. Connect in client mode to disable the internet gateway and enable internet search mode. AUTHOR
batmand was written by Marek Lindner <lindner_marek-at-yahoo.de>, Axel Neumann <axel-at-open-mesh.net>, Stefan Sperling <stsp-at-stsp.in-berlin.de>, Corinna 'Elektra' Aichele <onelektra-at-gmx.net>, Thomas Lopatic <thomas-at-lopatic.de>, Felix Fietkau <nbd-at-nbd.name>, Ludger Schmudde <lui-at-schmudde.com>, Simon Wunderlich <siwu-at-hrz.tu-chemnitz.de>, Andreas Langer <a.langer-at-q-dsl.de>. This manual page was written by Wesley Tsai <wesleyboy42@gmail.com>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system. batmand(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:32 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy