- Joined
- Apr 25, 2008
- Messages
- 99 (0.02/day)
- Location
- Sofia, Bulgaria
Processor | Q6600@3000MHz |
---|---|
Motherboard | Asus Striker II Formula |
Cooling | Thermalright Ultra 120 Extreme w/ Nanoxia@2000rpm |
Memory | G.Skill 2x1GB@800MHz@4-4-3-5@2.1V |
Video Card(s) | Asus 8800GTS G92@740/1800/2100 |
Storage | Seagate 7200.10 320GB |
Display(s) | CRT that SUCKS! |
Case | CM Cosmos S |
Audio Device(s) | Z-5500 Digital w/ SupremeFX II (the mobo's add-on sound card) |
Power Supply | Chieftec Modular 850W |
Software | WinXP, |
Benchmark Scores | 3dMark06 - 16735, SuperPI 1.5 - 17.8s |
So my problem is with setting with bridging - I have two 1000 onboard ports and I want to make them act like a single connection. A while ago a friend who is on the same ISP as me got a 10/100 card and bridged it to his onboard port and got double the speed! His limit was around 1.8 MB/s and after the bridge it was a solid 3.5MB/s. So I got a 5-port Netgear switch, bought another IP and I made annother LAN connection. Each of the connections work with around 5MB/s, which is my limit, but I want want to use double bandwith on one PC. So when I bridge the two connections their IPs disappear and tge bridge gets 0.0.0.0 everywhere (IP, gate, subnet mask). So my question is - do I have to buy another IP from my ISP and set it up on the bridge, or is the bridge supposed to get some fake IP automatically? I know that this trick works with my ISP, but I don't remember what settings my friend had and I SUCK at networking. Help please.