From: McKewon, Chris (cmckewon@xxxxxxxxxx)
Date: Thu Mar 01 2001 - 14:39:14 GMT-3
You'll have to run NAT.
-----Original Message-----
From: Johnny Dedon [mailto:johnny.dedon@exodus.net]
Sent: Thursday, March 01, 2001 9:30 AM
To: Ethan Whitt; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: Router interface as DHCP client
I am curious to know how you plan on getting the address for the
workstation. If the router does not have an address and does not have
forwarding turned on, then it will never get an address unless the DHCP
server is on the same local segment. You could maybe make the router the
DHCP server for the workstation. You can use IPCP under the PPP protocol to
get the IP address from the ISP if they support this.
Johnny Dedon
Senior Staff Consultant
Exodus Professional Services
johnny.dedon@exodus.net
www.exodus.net
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ethan Whitt" <ewhitt@infrastudies.com>
To: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Thursday, March 01, 2001 11:16 AM
Subject: Router interface as DHCP client
> Anyone,
>
> I have a Cisco 2611 router I want to use with my Cable modem. Can I
> configured my outside Ethernet interface to work as a DHCP client? I DO
NOT
> WANT TO FORWARD DHCP REQUESTS! I want the interface to be able to request
a
> IP address the same way my PC does. Please let me know if this is
possible.
> Thanks!
>
> Ethan Whitt
>
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