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Path: euryale.cc.adfa.oz.au!newshost.anu.edu.au!harbinger.cc.monash.edu.au!news.uwa.edu.au!classic.iinet.com.au!swing.iinet.net.au!news.uoregon.edu!newsfeed.internetmci.com!chi-news.cic.net!io.org!van-bc!uniserve!usenet From: tom@uniserve.com (Tom Samplonius) Newsgroups: comp.unix.bsd.freebsd.misc Subject: Re: DNS problems with 2 class C's on 1 T1 Date: 4 Nov 1995 06:38:08 GMT Organization: UNIServe Online Lines: 18 Distribution: world Message-ID: <47f1oh$2gu@atlas.uniserve.com> References: <47e7c7$puk@news.cerf.net> NNTP-Posting-Host: pc.sdf.com Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=US-ASCII X-Newsreader: WinVN 0.99.6 In article <47e7c7$puk@news.cerf.net>, elya@nic.cerf.net says... > >I'm having DNS and routing problems here. Can somebody post a reply >or email me with what would be a proper solution to this problem: > >We have 1 T1 line going to a.com. It is a WinNT machine with a frame >relay card and an ethernet card. The ethernet card goes to a 10 port >HUB. The NT does routing and is a gateway. There is no physical router >(like cisco). This domain is called a.com. My machine is a freebsd >unix machine called b.com with it's own class C ip address. How can >I setup my freebsd machine (and NT machine if applicable) to handle 2 >class C's on 1 T1 line? Err.. your question is a little vague: where does the FreeBSD system connect into your network? How does this involve DNS? Tom