Maybe you can put a router running NAT to hide the new addresses behind
the old ones.

K.

Koen Zeilstra
Legian
-----------------------
You know you're a little fat if you have stretch marks on your car.
                -- Cyrus, Chicago Reader 1/22/82

On Mon, 22 Apr 2002, Trevor Jennings wrote:

| Hello,
|
|  Where I work, we have a number of servers being co-located at one
| location and are planning on moving those servers to another co-location
| provider soon. My boss asked me why we could not, when we move the
| servers, just place a router at the original ISP to redirect all traffic
| from the original ip's to the new ip's rather than having duplicate
| servers or adjusting the DNS at the same time. I told him that I wasnt
| sure whether it was possible and was told by a friend that its not
| really possible to do that. Can anyone confirm that or rather explain why
| that is not possible? My Boss's theory was that we would have a router
| with 2 ethernet ports and redirect the original ip's to the new ip's
| through the second ethernet.
|
| Cheers,
|
|  - Trevor
|
|
|
|
|




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