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I am afraid I still don't quite understand. If I use -i eth0 that would be all the IP addresses coming in on<br>eth0, not just mine (eg 10.0.0.80). Or am I missing something?<br>
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Message: 9<br>
Date: Tue, 14 Aug 2007 22:15:44 -0400<br>
From: Robert Locke <lists@ralii.com><br>
Subject: Re: ip tables<br>
To: For users of Fedora <fedora-list@redhat.com><br>
Message-ID: <1187144144.11144.23.camel@rlt60f7.laptop.redhat.com><br>
Content-Type: text/plain<br>
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On Wed, 2007-08-15 at 01:26 +0000, tony.chamberlain@lemko.com wrote:<br>
> <br>
> Any way to have IP tables always allow itself (its IP address) without<br>
> having to change the<br>
> table every time you change a machine's IP address? Besides 127.0.0.1<br>
> that is, because,<br>
> say a machine is 10.0.0.80. If 10.0.0.80 is not in IP tables, then<br>
> you can still send if you send<br>
> to 127.0.0.1 but not if you send, as we sometimes have to, from<br>
> 10.0.0.80 to 10.0.0.80.<br>
> If you put 10.0.0.80 and then change the IP address you have to change<br>
> IP table.<br>
> <br>
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Take a look at the -i and -o options and simply assign them to the<br>
"interface", say eth0....<br>
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HTH,<br>
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--Rob<br>
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