> From: [email protected] [mailto:discuss-
> [email protected]] On Behalf Of Eric Chadbourne
> 
> I did the following:
> 1.  I gave the server a static ip in virtualbox and on the router.

I'm just going to assume you know what you're talking about - because the above 
statement doesn't make sense to me - I understand assigning a static IP to the 
machine, and obviously the router will have a static IP, but "assigning a 
static IP to the machine and on the router"...  Not a phrase that makes sense 
in my world.

Althesame, I think that's just a wording issue.


> 2.  Opened port 80 on the cisco device.  Any source and any ip to
> static ip.  Firewall is disabled on server.
> 3.  Enabled One-to-One NAT.  This beast is new to me but nothing
> worked until I did it.

Ugh.
First of all, don't disable firewall on server.  (I understand, for testing 
purposes.)
Second, don't enable one-to-one NAT.

You just want a standard inbound port 80 access-list rule.  I assume you have a 
cisco support contract, right?  Call them for help if needed.


> My web server is visible from the world and is visible on our lan.
> Oddly my server cannot see out.  For example:
> 
> eric@webserver1:~$ ping google.com
> ping: unknown host google.com

I bet it's only ping that's getting blocked.  Try telnet google.com 80, try 
wget some file from internet.

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