I have a FreeBSD 8.1 server installed and connected to network. (See topology screenshot).
I need to masquarade the PC ip 192.168.1.2 on FreeBSD to 1.1.1.3, not to 1.1.1.2. On router the the source traffic must been from 1.1.1.3, not from 1.1.1.2. Is it possible?
I tried with assigning secondary ip 1.1.1.3 with alias on rc.conf, it didnt worked.
Hi.
I am attempting to set up an OpenVPN server on my Solaris 11 box by following all the Linux guides. Thus far I have a working VPN that I can connect to and ssh onto my VPN server over which is great but not what I require long term.
I would like to route all VPN client requests for addresses... (0 Replies)
I am trying to test simple zfs functionality on a FreeBSD 8.2 VM. When I try to run a 'zpool create' I receive the following error:
# zpool create zfspool /dev/da0s1a
cannot create 'zfspool': no such pool or dataset
# zpool create zfspool /dev/da0
cannot create 'zfspool': no such pool or... (3 Replies)
i have this pool1 on my sun4u sparc machine
bash-3.00# zpool get all pool1
NAME PROPERTY VALUE SOURCE
pool1 size 292G -
pool1 used 76.5K -
pool1 available 292G -
pool1 capacity 0% -... (1 Reply)
I have a file that reads File (X.txt)
Contents of record 1:
rdrDESTINATION_ADDRESS (String) "91 971502573813"
rdrDESTINATION_IMSI (String) "000000000000000"
rdrORIGINATING_ADDRESS (String) "d0 movies"
rdrORIGINATING_IMSI (String) "000000000000000"
rdrTRAFFIC_EVENT_TIME... (0 Replies)
Hello there,
My mulithreaded application (which is too large to represent the source code here) is crashing after installing FreeBSD 7.1-RELEASE/amd64.
It worked properly on others machines (Dual Cores with 4GB of RAM - FreeBSD 6.2-RELEASE/i386).
The current machine has 2x Core 2 Duo... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
Is there any possibility to change the IP address of a package according to its MAC address. It would be a sort of L2 NAT. (i.e. If the MAC address is 00:1A:A0:1E:XX:XX so the dir IP will be 192.168.X.X)
Thanks!. (4 Replies)
i have a firewall with two interfaces eth0 and eth1, eth0 is connected to an external network, and eth0 is connected to a private lan.
im using this command for NAT
iptables -A POSTROUTING -t nat -s 192.168.0.0/24 -o eth0 -j SNAT --to-source 223.0.0.3
my questions are :
1) how can i... (4 Replies)
Hi All!
I have a Pentium 100 (32 MBRAM) with FreeBSD 4.4 installed on it and I am using it as a gateway. When I am downloading (or uploading) stuff simultaneously I see that natd is using up to 100% of the cpu capacity, hence the internet connection becomes blocked.
My guess is I will have... (1 Reply)
FREEBSD-UPDATE(8) BSD System Manager's Manual FREEBSD-UPDATE(8)NAME
freebsd-update -- fetch and install binary updates to FreeBSD
SYNOPSIS
freebsd-update [-b basedir] [-d workdir] [-f conffile] [-k KEY] [-r newrelease] [-s server] [-t address] command ...
DESCRIPTION
The freebsd-update tool is used to fetch, install, and rollback binary updates to the FreeBSD base system. Note that updates are only avail-
able if they are being built for the FreeBSD release and architecture being used; in particular, the FreeBSD Security Team only builds
updates for releases shipped in binary form by the FreeBSD Release Engineering Team, e.g., FreeBSD 7.3-RELEASE and FreeBSD 8.0-RELEASE, but
not FreeBSD 6.3-STABLE or FreeBSD 9.0-CURRENT.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-b basedir Operate on a system mounted at basedir. (default: /, or as given in the configuration file.)
-d workdir Store working files in workdir. (default: /var/db/freebsd-update/, or as given in the configuration file.)
-f conffile Read configuration options from conffile. (default: /etc/freebsd-update.conf)
-k KEY Trust an RSA key with SHA256 of KEY. (default: read value from configuration file.)
-r newrelease
Specify the new release to which freebsd-update should upgrade (upgrade command only).
-s server Fetch files from the specified server or server pool. (default: read value from configuration file.)
-t address Mail output of cron command, if any, to address. (default: root, or as given in the configuration file.)
COMMANDS
The command can be any one of the following:
fetch Based on the currently installed world and the configuration options set, fetch all available binary updates.
cron Sleep a random amount of time between 1 and 3600 seconds, then download updates as if the fetch command was used. If updates
are downloaded, an email will be sent (to root or a different address if specified via the -t option or in the configuration
file). As the name suggests, this command is designed for running from cron(8); the random delay serves to minimize the proba-
bility that a large number of machines will simultaneously attempt to fetch updates.
upgrade Fetch files necessary for upgrading to a new release. Before using this command, make sure that you read the announcement and
release notes for the new release in case there are any special steps needed for upgrading. Note that this command may require
up to 500 MB of space in workdir depending on which components of the FreeBSD base system are installed.
install Install the most recently fetched updates or upgrade.
rollback Uninstall the most recently installed updates.
IDS Compare the system against a "known good" index of the installed release.
TIPS
o If your clock is set to local time, adding the line
0 3 * * * root /usr/sbin/freebsd-update cron
to /etc/crontab will check for updates every night. If your clock is set to UTC, please pick a random time other than 3AM, to avoid
overly imposing an uneven load on the server(s) hosting the updates.
o In spite of its name, freebsd-update IDS should not be relied upon as an "Intrusion Detection System", since if the system has been tam-
pered with it cannot be trusted to operate correctly. If you intend to use this command for intrusion-detection purposes, make sure you
boot from a secure disk (e.g., a CD).
FILES
/etc/freebsd-update.conf Default location of the freebsd-update configuration file.
/var/db/freebsd-update/ Default location where freebsd-update stores temporary files and downloaded updates.
SEE ALSO freebsd-update.conf(5)AUTHORS
Colin Percival <cperciva@FreeBSD.org>
FreeBSD July 14, 2010 FreeBSD