[CentOS] Cisco DPC3825 - Web Server

2013-08-08 Thread Fidel Dominguez
Friends I have the following Cisco DPC3825. Enter the settings and put in the DMZ web server that I have, but when I try to access it from another network I get the error code 504, which is the gateway problem. I can access the server via ssh without problems. Research on google for 3 days and can

Re: [CentOS] Cisco DPC3825 - Web Server

2013-08-08 Thread Eliezer Croitoru
How exactly is the Cisco related to the CentOS server?? If ssh works then you should get the same result unless the device is loaded and not fit for the job!! How do you setup this cisco device?? by CLI or other methods? try this:

Re: [CentOS] Cisco DPC3825 - Web Server

2013-08-08 Thread John R Pierce
On 8/8/2013 2:46 PM, Fidel Dominguez wrote: The IP to access my router via web from the local network is 192.168.100.1, and the IP of the server I put in the DMZ is 192.168.0.17. assuming the network masks for both those are /24 (255.255.255.0) they won't be able to communicate directly as

Re: [CentOS] Cisco DPC3825 - Web Server

2013-08-08 Thread Fidel Dominguez
The router is connected by network cable, and the only thing that changes in the configuration of the router was add the web server IP to the DMZ zone. On Thu, Aug 8, 2013 at 3:28 PM, John R Pierce pie...@hogranch.com wrote: On 8/8/2013 2:46 PM, Fidel Dominguez wrote: The IP to access my

Re: [CentOS] Cisco DPC3825 - Web Server

2013-08-08 Thread Fidel Dominguez
This is the error messages: Server error The server for http://www.mydomain.com took too long to respond. It may be overloaded. Error code: 504 Any idea??? On Thu, Aug 8, 2013 at 4:23 PM, Fidel Dominguez fdvalero.r...@gmail.comwrote: The router is connected by network cable, and the only

Re: [CentOS] Cisco DPC3825 - Web Server

2013-08-08 Thread John R Pierce
On 8/8/2013 4:23 PM, Fidel Dominguez wrote: The router is connected by network cable, and the only thing that changes in the configuration of the router was add the web server IP to the DMZ zone. since we have no idea what your network topology is, and what DMZ means in this context, meh.