[lug] Qwest ADSL
Samartha
sam at puck.mountainbitwarrior.com
Mon Feb 19 23:33:25 MST 2001
Hi Larry,
not up yet?
>To set the 675, were the commands something like this after starting your
>communication program:
>
>enable
>password <password>
>set nat entry delete all
>set nat entry add 10.0.0.2
I did not do the above add and delete command
I added more, took it from this:
enable
set nvram erase
write
reboot
enable
set password enable [user's preferred password for enable mode]
set ppp wan0-0 ipcp 0.0.0.0
set ppp wan0-0 dns 0.0.0.0
set ppp wan0-0 login [customer's username with our service]
set ppp wan0-0 password [customer's password with our service]
set ppp restart enabled
set interface eth0 address 10.0.0.1
set NAT enabled
set web disable
set telnet disable
set dhcp server enabled ### I'd leave that off
write
reboot
can you run show nat on the 675, mine shows:
cbos#show
nat
NAT is currently
enabled
Inside Global Address set to
63.227.10.89
Inside Local Inside
Global Timer Flags Protocol
looks like the 63.227.10.89 must be set by the router automatically to the
assigned dynamic IP
>set mask 255.255.255.0
>set interface eth0 address 10.0.0.1
>write
>reboot
>
>I think the "set nat entry delete all" and the "set nat entry add 10.0.0.2"
>will stop the ongoing "who has 10.0.0.2++ tell 10.0.0.1", but I haven't
>tried it yet. Just trying to check out a few things with you first. While
>I'm writing this, I'm trying a few things, too.
>
>Is this similar to what your 675 shows for "show interface". What about the
>vip0,1,2
not needed right now - I think you can split the bandwidth to different
channels or so.
>cbos#show interface
> IP Address Mask
>eth0 10.0.0.1 255.255.255.0
>
>vip0 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0
>
>vip1 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0
>
>vip2 0.0.0.0 255.255.255.0
>
>wan0 Physical Port: Not Trained
>
> Dest IP Address Mask
>wan0-0 63.226.100.254 255.255.255.255
mine is identical
( of cause, wan0-0 IP differs )
>No, it is not connected at the moment.
>
>About the ethernet setup on the linux box that connects to the 675 - sounds
>like you are using a static IP - is that correct? ie 10.0.0.2.
I had it on dhcp and the 675 dhcp server assigned 10.0.0.2, now I have it
static.
>Are you using two ethernet cards?
when I set it up, I used one.
>If yes, which one is connected to the 675?
eth0
>Is it brought at boot time or do you manually configure it with "ifconfig"
>and "route"?
With SuSE, I used Yast - changed everything so it left only eth0, made it
dhcp (I had to install dhcp client software - it was not installed) and I
think this set the default route. It came up nice after reboot.
Default gateway would be 10.0.0.1
>Assuming you are using static IP:
>What netmask are you using 255.255.255.0?
>What broadcast 10.0.0.255?
yes, all the same.
Can you run the following tests:
ping the internet from the router:
cbos#ping 216.17.175.194
-t
Sending 8 byte pings to 216.17.175.194 every 2 second(s)
forever
Press 'return' to stop
ping
Received ping reply: size 8 from
216.17.175.194
ping the LAN from the router:
cbos#ping 10.0.0.2
-t
Sending 8 byte pings to 10.0.0.2 every 2 second(s)
forever
Press 'return' to stop
ping
Received ping reply: size 8 from
10.0.0.2
ping the router from the LAN:
> ping 10.0.0.1
PING 10.0.0.1 (10.0.0.1): 56 data bytes
64 bytes from 10.0.0.1: icmp_seq=0 ttl=64 time=0.887 ms
ping the internet (nameserver) from the LAN:
ping 206.196.128.1
PING 206.196.128.1 (206.196.128.1): 56 data bytes
64 bytes from 206.196.128.1: icmp_seq=0 ttl=250 time=26.797 ms
if that works, you should be in business.
good luck!
Samartha
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