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Jared, 192.168.1.1 is the default IP address of many home broadband routers (linksys, etc). From seeing buttloads of commercial networks I see a lot of 2,5,10,100 as well. The reason I say to stay away from these is simply for future growth of your own network. More than likely you will not see any problems at all if you use 192.168.1.1 but if you ever decide to create a VPN to your buddy or office that is using 192.168.1.1 you will run into some significant problems. So, in summary, try to be unique :) Regards, Josh Simoneau Senior Basket Weaver & Taco Engineer -----Original Message----- From: Jared Patterson (DSL AK) [mailto:JaredP at datacom dot co dot nz] Sent: Wednesday, June 22, 2005 3:56 PM To: Josh Simoneau; m0n0wall at lists dot m0n0 dot ch Subject: RE: [m0n0wall] Using m0n0 with an external dsl router Thanks mate, will give this a try when I get home. PS: Why do you not recommend to use 1,2,5,10 etc?? Thanks for everything Jared -----Original Message----- From: Josh Simoneau [mailto:jsimoneau at lmtcs dot com] Sent: Thursday, 23 June 2005 07:47 To: m0n0wall at lists dot m0n0 dot ch Subject: RE: [m0n0wall] Using m0n0 with an external dsl router Jared, While it's possible to keep them both starting with 10.x.x.x this really isn't making the job easy for you. If you must do it this way, you cannot use 255.0.0.0 for your subnet mask. Instead of correcting the mask, lets just change the LAN address. No reason to have a class A subnet on your LAN unless you have a ton of computers. Change your LAN IP to something like 192.168.X.1 with a subnet mask of 255.255.255.0. Make X anything you like from 1-254, but I recommend not using 1, 2, 5, 10, 100. Make sure that if you change your LAN IP address you change your DHCP server settings to reflect this (if you use DHCP). Also make sure the box (on bottom of the general menu? Rules menu?) for "Block data from private networks" is not checked. Regards, Josh Simoneau -----Original Message----- From: Jared Patterson (DSL AK) [mailto:JaredP at datacom dot co dot nz] Sent: Wednesday, June 22, 2005 3:11 PM To: Holger Bauer; m0n0wall at lists dot m0n0 dot ch Subject: RE: [m0n0wall] Using m0n0 with an external dsl router Hi, My Wan is on 10.1.20.0/8 - Do you I change my lan or wan range, if so what do I make it? Cheers Jared ________________________________ From: Holger Bauer [mailto:Holger dot Bauer at citec dash ag dot de] Sent: Wednesday, 22 June 2005 21:46 To: Jared Patterson (DSL AK); m0n0wall at lists dot m0n0 dot ch Subject: AW: [m0n0wall] Using m0n0 with an external dsl router Your WAN-Range and LAN-Range has a conflict. /8 means that every IP starting with 10.X.X.X is assumed at the interface with that subnetmask. Your WAN-Range is inside your LAN-Range this way. Try a /16 on LAN or change that adressrange completely (for example 172.16.1.1 /16). What is the subnetrange on your WAN? I don't think this config has worked with smoothwall either this way. Regards, Holger Bauer -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: Jared Patterson (DSL AK) [mailto:JaredP at datacom dot co dot nz] Gesendet: Mittwoch, 22. Juni 2005 11:14 An: m0n0wall at lists dot m0n0 dot ch Betreff: [m0n0wall] Using m0n0 with an external dsl router Hi All, I Have setup another little lan trying to get m0n0 to work in my current setup. All hardware in this setup is relatively the same other than the dsl router is the model below, Dynalink RTA 220. Heres the current setup; Internal Lan - 10.1.1.0/8 M0n0 Lan - 10.1.1.201 M0n0 Wan - 10.1.20.1 DSL Router - 10.1.20.200 DSL Router currently running DHCP which assigned 10.1.20.1 to Wan. PC in Internal Lan is currently on a static setup with 10.1.1.201 set as the gateway. Dont know what is going wrong as just before this setup, I installed Smoothwall which was setup exactly the same, and ran with no errors. Although smoothwall kinda sucks, would be wicked to get m0n0 running. Attached is the status.php as im out of ideas. Any help would be greatly appricated. Cheers Jared ____________ Virus checked by G DATA AntiVirusKit --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: m0n0wall dash unsubscribe at lists dot m0n0 dot ch For additional commands, e-mail: m0n0wall dash help at lists dot m0n0 dot ch |