Linux - Networking This forum is for any issue related to networks or networking.
Routing, network cards, OSI, etc. Anything is fair game. |
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05-11-2001, 12:34 PM
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#1
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Member
Registered: Apr 2001
Location: NY
Distribution: used to be Redhat, now Debian Sarge
Posts: 291
Rep:
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I have two computers at my house, and i want to set them both up so i can connect to internet with one cable line. One of my computers has Redhat 6.2 and Windows 98SE and the second computer has Mandrake and windows 98. How would i go about setting them up so i can go online with both computers. Any howto's would be helpful. Thanks . 
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05-11-2001, 02:29 PM
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#2
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LQ Guru
Registered: Jan 2001
Posts: 24,149
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If you are on a Cable connection, I would recommend the linksys cable/dsl router, very easy setup. Took all of about 5 minutes, just take it this way, it took longer to get out of the box than to setup the connection.
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05-17-2001, 08:12 PM
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#3
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Senior Member
Registered: May 2001
Location: Bristol, UK
Distribution: Slackware, Fedora, RHES
Posts: 2,243
Rep:
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The other method you could use is to setup the Linux box with the internet connection, enable IP Masquerading, then set this as your default gateway for the Windows machine (I'm assuming that you already have them networked). The howto is at
http://linuxdocs.org/HOWTOs/IP-Masquerade-HOWTO.html
Once the support is in your Kernel its only a couple of lines to enable it.
HTH
Jamie...
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05-18-2001, 07:27 PM
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#4
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Member
Registered: May 2001
Location: Kingsport, TN
Distribution: RedHat 6.1
Posts: 61
Rep:
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The linksys router is about $100-$150, and allows you to link 4 machines to the web, gives firewall protection, and is cross platform. You can also do this in Linux, but it is more challenging. Depends on how much you value your time...
/js
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05-21-2001, 08:47 AM
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#5
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Member
Registered: Apr 2001
Location: NY
Distribution: used to be Redhat, now Debian Sarge
Posts: 291
Original Poster
Rep:
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thanks
Thank you all for your replies. Time is not a problem for me, but i am a newbie and i am not sure if i can do all of those in linux by myself. Anyways, thanks all of you for your opinions.
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05-21-2001, 09:31 AM
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#6
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LQ Guru
Registered: Jan 2001
Posts: 24,149
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Actually the Linksys router is about the easiest thing to setup. If your Nics are working in linux, all you do is change your network settings for them. Also you can actually link up to 255 computers on one connection.
And the plus is, it is a firewall and pracitcally a very good one too. All the config for it is web based type pages stored on the router itself.
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05-21-2001, 12:08 PM
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#7
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Member
Registered: May 2001
Location: Kingsport, TN
Distribution: RedHat 6.1
Posts: 61
Rep:
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Correct that the Linksys router can handle 254 computers, but without additional hardware you are limited to 4 as that's how many ports it has. However, each port can be taken to a hub or switch which will cheaply multiply the number of available ports.
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