Hi Jay:
I agree with your diagnosis of eth0/eth1 gateway
collision, I just do not know how to take care of it.
Before I did not have to set a GW for eth0 and, if I
remember correctly, had a GW = 10.0.0.1 for eth1.
Anyway, my /sbin/route output:
Destination Gateway Genmask Flags
Metric Ref Use Iface
68.187.12.0 * 255.255.252.0 U
0 0 0 eth0
169.254.0.0 * 255.255.0.0 U
0 0 0 eth0
default cable3-0-10-rcp 0.0.0.0 UG
0 0 0 eth0
Note that my eth1 is down because if it goes up, my
internet connection fails.
Thanks for your help.
Enrico
--- Jay Scherrer <jay(a)scherrer.com> ha scritto:
Enrico,
What is the setting for eth0?
eth0 and eth1 must have different ip's.
I am not familiar with 10.0.0.0's netmask. I use
192.168.0.0 with a
netmask of 255.255.255.0 as I am not running such a
large network.
But if your eth1 has 10.0.0.1
your eth0 set to DHCP
and your other lan set to 10.0.0.50
What does: /sbin/route
Show?
Have you set eth0 and eth1 with /sbin/route?
example: /sbin/route add gateway etho
(because you don't have an firm ip address)
for eth1 you would: /sbin/route add 10.0.0.1
read your man route pages first.
It looks like you have a collision between eth0 and
eth1 for the
gateway.
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