Quote:
So 192.168.0.113 on ral0 is in the same WIFI network as 192.168.1.1.
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I do not understand what you mean by this. Is the netmask for the subnet on vr0 (192.168.0.113) for a /24 network (255.255.255.0), or is it for a
wider subnet?
Quote:
From 192.168.0.113 on vr0 (ethernet) I connect to WIFI router (what ip to give on vr0? 192.168.0.114 or bridge vr0 with ral0?)
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I think you are confused....you have certainly confused me. If I understand what you have written, you have two NICs -- vr0 and ral0, and they will be two separate subnets: 192.168.1/24 (perhaps) and 10.0.1/24. Now, you want to know how to configure this?
1. Set your OpenBSD system to be a router (also called a "gateway") by enabling IP forwarding as described in FAQ 6.2.7.
2. Either add a route to your ISP gateway device for the 10.0.1/24 network through 192.168.0.113, or provision your OpenBSD system to use Network Address Translation (NAT) when it routes packets to/from the 10.0.1/24 subnet. This latter requires the use of PF. If this were my topology, I would add a route to the gateway device so it knows how to reach 10.0.1.x addresses. NAT would then be unnecessary.
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If this is
not what you were looking for, please be more clear when you ask again.