Now that makes sense.  With Win2k (an example OS) a NIC can also be 
assigned a public IP.  Have you done it?  It would be nice if you posted an 
exmaple of a configuration.   [=:


At 08/10/2001 02:07 pm , "Chris Green" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>    wrote:
>Think of IP Passthrough like routing.  You would need another subnet of 
>routable internet IP's.  You can't passthrough an IP from your EXT subnet 
>to your internal network.  A configuration like you are referring to would 
>require you to setup a PSN on public IP's and use IP Passthrough filters 
>to pass the appropriate traffic to/from the EXT.
>
>Chris Green
>
>>From: Jon Schlegel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>Subject: IP Pass Through from PSN to EXT interface Setup Problems
>>Date: Mon, 08 Oct 2001 00:50:18 -0400
>>
>>Hello everyone,
>>
>>I'm using GB-Pro 3.2.1 and would like to connect a server running on NT 4.0
>>on the PSN to the EXT network via IP Pass through.  The PSN interface is
>>set up to a Class C internal address (192.168.x.x) where some other servers
>>are running NAT to the EXT network.  Running IP Pass Through will require,
>>it seems, for the server host to be set up for one of my EXT network IPs
>>of  216.42.x.x  even though it will exist on the  192.168.x.x  network of
>>the PSN interface.
>>
>>Is this doable?  If so, what GNAT Box setup is required?  Just as
>>important, what NT networking setup is required?  Do I use the EXT network
>>router IP as the default gateway or do I use the PSN interface IP?
>>
>>
>>Jon Schlegel
>>[EMAIL PROTECTED]


Reply via email to