You create an alias on the GNAT Box EXT, and then tunnel port 80
from the Alias to port 80 of the machine that will serve the Notes
(and a static IP mapping from this machine back to the alias).

The existing webserver will continue to serve port 80 on the
GNAT Box's primary EXT address.

Mike Burden
Lynk Systems
(616)532-4985
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, July 20, 2000 1:08 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Web enabling Notes


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We are going to make our Lotus Notes accessible to people from the
internet, using only a browser.  We have decided to replicate the mail
files of the users who need this service from the Notes server on the
protected network, to a new Notes server on the DMZ.

My question is this.  I believe that I will need a 'real' IP address for
the server on the DMZ, so that I can use IP passthrough to get to it from
the internet, is this correct?  I believe that using the 'tunnel and
filter' method would send all port 80 traffic to this box, which is
definitely not what I want.

Can anyone confirm this?

Thanks,
Wayne



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