whitebomber
Technical User
It seems that when a machine has dual nics it likes to share that fact with other machines. Here's my scenario:
I have a server, ServerA, with two nics. One with a 150.102.x.x address to the corporate network and one with a 10.x.x.x address for a private network.
When I map a drive to another server, ServerB, over the 150.102.x.x nic it also seems to share the fact that it has a 10.x.x.x interface too. Where I see this is on ServerB. If I do a netstat command on ServerB, I will see both ServerA addresses at the time of mapping the drive and periodically at other times.
Is there some way to setup ServerA so that the two nics are totally isolated from each other. I would have thought that would be default behavior but it doesn't seem to be. Since seeing this issue I have setup other similar scenarios with the same results.
Thanks.
I have a server, ServerA, with two nics. One with a 150.102.x.x address to the corporate network and one with a 10.x.x.x address for a private network.
When I map a drive to another server, ServerB, over the 150.102.x.x nic it also seems to share the fact that it has a 10.x.x.x interface too. Where I see this is on ServerB. If I do a netstat command on ServerB, I will see both ServerA addresses at the time of mapping the drive and periodically at other times.
Is there some way to setup ServerA so that the two nics are totally isolated from each other. I would have thought that would be default behavior but it doesn't seem to be. Since seeing this issue I have setup other similar scenarios with the same results.
Thanks.