On Tue, Oct 28, 2003 at 09:39:23AM -0500, Jason Lavigne wrote:
Could I have red.foo.bar forwarded to 192.168.0.2, pink.foo.bar
forwarded to 192.168.0.3 and say blue.foo.bar go to the local machine
wouldn't you use DNS (bind) for this?
How? I only have one external IP address (say 1.2.3.4)
Lavigne
Cc: 'FreeBSD-questions'
Subject: Re: Complicated ipfw/ipf forwarding.
On Tue, Oct 28, 2003 at 09:39:23AM -0500, Jason Lavigne wrote:
Could I have red.foo.bar forwarded to 192.168.0.2, pink.foo.bar
forwarded to 192.168.0.3 and say blue.foo.bar go to the local machine
wouldn't you use DNS
On Tue, Oct 28, 2003 at 02:35:31PM +, Lewis Thompson wrote:
I have a public IP address and a couple of machines sitting behind a
FreeBSD router doing NAT. I'm using ipnat and ipf right now (although I
used to use natd/ipfw so I don't mind switching -- I started using
ipf/ipnat because of
'Lewis Thompson' [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Tue, Oct 28, 2003 at 09:39:23AM -0500, Jason Lavigne wrote:
Could I have red.foo.bar forwarded to 192.168.0.2, pink.foo.bar
forwarded to 192.168.0.3 and say blue.foo.bar go to the local machine
wouldn't you use DNS (bind) for this?
How?
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Lewis Thompson
Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2003 8:36 AM
To: FreeBSD-questions
Subject: Complicated ipfw/ipf forwarding.
Hi,
I have a public IP address and a couple of machines sitting behind a
FreeBSD
I suppose something like this might be possible with squid, Though im
not sure how to do it.
-Frank
On Tue, 2003-10-28 at 17:30, Andras Kende wrote:
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Lewis Thompson
Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2003 8:36