If your protected servers are on a different NIC than your inside users (eg.
you have 3 NICs, 1 for inside, 1 for outside, and 1 for publicly accessible
hosts) then you can use the Alias command which will redirect packets from
inside addresses to your protected servers using their public addresses. But
the PIX can't route packets back to the same interface they have come from
which is why this won't work if your servers connected to the PIX using the
same NIC.
Dan
On 16 Sep 2000, at 14:32, Harry Whitehouse wrote:
> I have a small, fledgling network running nicely behind a Cisco 520. I have a
> Web server behind the Cisco and I'm using NAT to translate incoming addresses.
> Everything works just fine when I access the Web site from an "outside" client.
>
> But I've noticed that if I fire up a browser client *inside* the protected
> network, I can't access the inside Web server by simply using the published
> outside URL. The only way I can seem to do this is by typing in the protected,
> non-published inside address of the Web server in the browser.
>
> However, from an "inside" client browser I can get to any other outside Web site
> (e.g. microsoft.com, google.com).
>
> I'm sure this behavior can be explained (and hopefully fixed), but I can't
> figure out what's going on!
>
> Any help would be appreciated!
---
D.C. Crichton email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Senior Systems Analyst tel: +44 (0)121 706 6000
Computer Manuals Ltd. fax: +44 (0)121 606 0477
Computer book info on the web:
http://computer-manuals.co.uk/
Want to earn money? Join our affiliate scheme!
http://computer-manuals.co.uk/affiliate/
-
[To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with
"unsubscribe firewalls" in the body of the message.]