Re: question about Framed-Route
John Storms (jstorms@livingston.com)
Tue, 10 Sep 1996 10:05:38 -0700
At 03:39 PM 9/7/96 -0400, you wrote:
>I am using a PM2E-30, and want to give a customer a dedicated dialup
>line with a fixed IP address. I set up my users file as follows:
>
>
>user Password = "UNIX"
> User-Service-Type = Framed-User,
> Framed-Protocol = PPP,
> Framed-Address = 206.205.132.9,
> Framed-Netmask = 255.255.255.0,
> Framed-Route = "206.205.132.2 206.205.132.9 1",
> Framed-Routing = None
>
>When I dial-in using this account, I get connected as
>the correct IP address (206.205.132.9), but I can't ping
>or otherwise access this address. What does the first
>address in the Framed-Route line signify? Is it supposed
>to be the address of my router, my portmaster, or
>something else?
The first parameter in the Framed-Route parameter is the "destination" or
what you are going to route. If its a single IP address then you are
routing that ip address to a given gateway. If its a network address then
you are routing that entire network/subnet through that gateway.
Framed-Route = "<destination> <gateway> <metric>"
<destination> What you are routing.
<gateway> Where you are routing the "destination" to.
<metric> How many hops away the gateway is.
---
jstorms@livingston.com
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