I am assuming the nics work with -user-net properties, with a simulated router/firewall DHCP server at 10.0.2.2. Is it possible to manually assign an IP (such as 10.0.2.5; is 10.0.2.3 still a nameserver?) and still have access to the internet? Wolfgang Richter wrote: >Basically, what I want to accomplish is this. eth0 and eth1 are in >bridging mode, with eth0 supposedly leading out to the internet, and >eth1 supposedly connecting an internal network to the internet. eth2 >connects to a third network, but that doesn't really matter too much. >eth0 wants a few ports open and so does eth2. Is this possible at all >with QEMU? So far I've had no luck...but will continue trying different >configurations. > >-- >Wolfgang Richter > >wrichter@att.net wrote: > > > >>I am trying to simulate three NIC's, with redirected ports from the host to my simulated system. I want port 22 to go to NIC 1, and port 443 to go to NIC 3. Is this possible? So far, I think only eth0 seems to be working on my guest OS, so maybe my -redir tcp:22::22 -redir tcp:443::443 are screwing up the multiple NIC's?? I have to redirect ports in order for the guest OS to have servers right (SSH, SSL web)? I am using QEMU 0.7.0. >> >>I just want to make sure my invocation of QEMU (under Windows XP) isn't screwing anything up: >> >>qemu.exe -L "\Program Files\Qemu\bios" -m 256 -hda "C:\Program Files\Qemu\RooHoneynet.img" -enable-audio -localtime -nics 3 -redir tcp:22::22 -redir tcp:443::443 >> >>-- >>Wolfgang Richter >> >> >>_______________________________________________ >>Qemu-devel mailing list >>Qemu-devel@nongnu.org >>http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/qemu-devel >> >> >> >> >> >>------------------------------------------------------------------------ >> >>_______________________________________________ >>Qemu-devel mailing list >>Qemu-devel@nongnu.org >>http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/qemu-devel >> >> -- Wolfgang Richter wrichter@att.net