Yes, I guess I want to know if the bridge is set up correctly when one
of the interfaces in the bridge has an IP address that is being used for
the NAT address for my internal LAN.
Regards,
Tim
On 3/6/2015 3:07 PM, WebDawg wrote:
On Fri, Mar 6, 2015 at 2:16 PM, Tim Hogan <t...@hoganzoo.com
<mailto:t...@hoganzoo.com>> wrote:
I am looking for some advice from the group about the best way to
put pfSense in my environment so that it can filter all traffic.
The cable provider that I use has given me a /29 of static IP
address and one of those addresses is assigned to the cable modem.
When I asked about putting the modem into bridging mode I found
out that their idea of bridging is to disable the firewall and
DHCP service on the modem. So this is what I have come up with so
far.
Cable Modem: 70.70.70.94
pfSense WAN: 70.70.70.93 (also my NAT address for the LAN)
pfSense LAN: 10.100.100.1/24 <http://10.100.100.1/24>
pfSense OPT1: bridged to WAN interface, no IP address
The OPT1 interface is connected to a switch that has the other
devices with the remaining IP address in the 70.70.70.89/29
<http://70.70.70.89/29> space and I have the firewall rules for
this space on the WAN interface. It seems to work but I am
wondering if I am using the bridging feature correctly. Any thoughts?
Thanks,
Tim
I do not understand the question. Using the bridge feature correctly?
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