On Mon, Dec 13, 2004 at 02:55:39AM -0600, John Reese wrote:
> I work for a company that has nearly exhausted its Class C range of IP
> addresses.

192.168/16 is a /16, or a legacy "Class B" network. I think you meant /24.

Classful routing is deprecated, there are technically no more Class A/B/C/D
networks.


>             We decided to get by the problem by using a single Linux
> router running iptables to route the exhausted 192.168.1.0 network
> (eth0) to three LANs with numbers 192.168.101.0, 192.168.102.0, and
> 192.168.103.0 (eth1, eth2, and eth3). Our goal is to have clients inside
> those networks see a single server in the old 192.168.1.0 network. 

You should be routing between the segments with filtering where necessary,
the only thing that NAT is going to get you between networks is some 
obscurity about which two systems are actually communicating.

-- 
Matthew S. Hallacy                            FUBAR, LART, BOFH Certified
http://www.poptix.net                           GPG public key 0x01938203

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