--- Satya satyap@satya.virtualave.net wrote:
On Aug 10, 2001 at 05:56, S. Krishnan wrote: Which I've already done. Now how to access the Linbox from outside?
Granted, I forgot to add that he needed an
additional
LAN card to provide routing services for a public
IP
address for the Linux box.
Hm hm hm?
using Windows forwarding services - but that will
mean
an additional network card on the Windows gateway.
The configuration shown above will do it, eh?
have no idea if it will support multipoint
forwarding
services, with one being NAT'ed and one with full access. Windows Proxy Server ought to work,
however.
That's what I want, I think.
I get the general idea, but I need specifics. How do I address my Linux box from the outside now?
On Aug 10, 2001 at 20:21, premstud@vsnl.com wrote:
|--------| ______|__ |--------|
ISP | 1 | | | --------|WinBox | |LinuxBox| |__ ___2_| |________| | |----- To private network
A static route is added from the NIC 1 to the linux
box with
How to do that in Windows?
NIC 1 as the gateway for packets destined to the
linux box.
And how to do that?
The lan connects to the windows gateway through the
2nd NIC, and is seprated from the external network.
In our case, there is one NIC for the internal network. All packets should go to it, and those meant for the Linbox will be picked up by it. How to translate external packets coming to 65.1.1.1 (e.g.) to 192.168.0.127 (e.g.)? And translate only those packets meant for the Winbox. NAT?
A pretty conundrum, Satya. Let me apply my mind (or what passes for one!) to it, and mail you on this tomorrow. Actually, the whole thing gets screwed up because of Windows. I assume you're using NT 4.0/ W2000. Could you tell me who your ISP is? That should give me an idea of the equipment that they deploy, which might help a little.
Cheers,
Krishnan
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