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OpenBSD Installation and Upgrading Installing and upgrading OpenBSD. |
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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. ----- If this is not what you were looking for, please be more clear when you ask again. |
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See if the descriptions in http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subnetwork provide you with additional insight. |
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One of the better subnetting guides is the classic 3Com whitepaper: holdenweb.com/static/docs/3comip.pdf Traditionally, problems existed with how exponents were formatted in this document, but apparently someone has corrected how exponents are rendered in this version. Other subnetting guides can be found on the Internet, but many don't go into much detail. Unfortunately, configuring routes is highly dependent upon understanding subnets. Studying the above document is a very good start on the subject. |
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