If you just want public IPs passed to downstream devices than bridging
two NICs will allow you to accomplish this. Otherwise you will need to
setup NAT port forwards or 1:1 NAT. You assign the external IP and
internal IP when creating the NAT rule.
The device only needs to be as fast to handle
, vyatta.org is the best place to get the information you need.
Best,
Wilson
From: ML mailingli...@mailnewsrss.com
To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org
Sent: Monday, October 5, 2009 2:45:12 PM
Subject: [CentOS] More about firewalling
Hi All,
So before
ML wrote:
I have a Comcast business circuit with 13 IP's. The gateway device
they provide is a 'pass through' device. They sent traffic for all 13
IP's my way. It just allows traffic through. So if I put in a device
to firewall (like Ipcop or Vyatta or something) in front, say it has 3
ML wrote:
Hi All,
So before when I used PIX's for my employer, our traffic was
statically routed to one IP and then the firewall decided if allowed/
denied and passed it on or dropped it.
I have a Comcast business circuit with 13 IP's. The gateway device
they provide is a 'pass
Hi All,
So before when I used PIX's for my employer, our traffic was
statically routed to one IP and then the firewall decided if allowed/
denied and passed it on or dropped it.
I have a Comcast business circuit with 13 IP's. The gateway device
they provide is a 'pass through' device. They
ML wrote:
I have a Comcast business circuit with 13 IP's. The gateway device
they provide is a 'pass through' device. They sent traffic for all 13
IP's my way. It just allows traffic through. So if I put in a device
to firewall (like Ipcop or Vyatta or something) in front, say it has 3
NICS,
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