Gnatbox is not designed to do that. You should use your subnet outside of your Gnatbox and use private addressing inside and for the DMZ. You can then use static mappings and inbound tunnels to allow the servers on the DMZ to be externally accessible
Chris Green >From: "Bryan T. Schmidt" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >To: John Ross <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >Subject: Re: howto route? >Date: Fri, 14 Jul 2000 13:27:59 -0600 > >--------------------- Attention ----------------------------- >Online GNAT Box User Forum is Now Open >Click the Register link and sign up today >http://www.gnatbox.com/cgi-bin/Ultimate.cgi >------------------------------------------------------------- >Send postings to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >Access the list archives at: http://www.gnatbox.com/gb-users/ >------------------------------------------------------------- >Oh, I have the light version, and am testing it, but my difficulty is >conceptual... normally, all network interfaces are attached to different >networks, but what I am loking for is more akin to a bridging firewall. I >do >not know how to put the same network addresses on two different interfaces, >or >even if that is a good way to approach it... > >-Bryan > >John Ross wrote: > > > Why don't you download the demo version or the light version and try to >set > > it up yourself? Actually implementing what you have described is >probably > > much easier than you think. > > > > -John > >-- > > >Bryan T. Schmidt >Systems/Network Administrator >[EMAIL PROTECTED] >Profitool Inc. > > >---------------------------------------------- >To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] >with "unsubscribe gb-users your_email_address >in the body of the message ________________________________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com
