On Mon, May 23, 2011 at 02:25:26PM -0700, Tim Dickson wrote:
Now I'm trying to segment the /24 into 4 subnets with the pfSense
interfaces being:
It sounds easy enough - but may be because I'm not understanding exactly what
you want.
But the simplest method I could come up with would be
Am 24.05.2011 um 00:45 schrieb David Burgess:
On Mon, May 23, 2011 at 4:14 PM, Andreas Kaiser di...@binary-punks.com
wrote:
That allows you to do any routing you want between interfaces / WAN and
gives you granular control of everything.
*That* is exactly what I want ;-)
Have you
Hi Andreas,
On Mon, May 23, 2011 at 11:24:48PM +0200, Andreas Kaiser wrote:
..
A Vmware host machine has 1 NIC and uses 1 public IP itself.
A second public IP (say 4.3.2.17/32) is used for the pfSense VM's
WAN interface. The provider is routing a /24 (say 1.2.3.0/24) on
that second IP.
Hi Frank!
Am 24.05.2011 um 09:57 schrieb Frank Heydlauf:
On Mon, May 23, 2011 at 11:24:48PM +0200, Andreas Kaiser wrote:
..
A Vmware host machine has 1 NIC and uses 1 public IP itself.
A second public IP (say 4.3.2.17/32) is used for the pfSense VM's
WAN interface. The provider is routing a
I'm currently failing in reaching any of the VMs via their interfaces
connected to the 1.2.3.128/25. I've configured firewall rules to
allow ICMP echo requests as well as TCP ports 80 and 443 for
destinations in that subnet on the WAN interface. I can see that
traffic is blocked when I disable
Hi Andreas,
On Tue, May 24, 2011 at 10:40:41AM +0200, Andreas Kaiser wrote:
Am 24.05.2011 um 09:57 schrieb Frank Heydlauf:
...
let's draw a chart (use monospaced font!):
ISP
|
|
|
Hi Steve,
Am 24.05.2011 um 13:20 schrieb Steve Haavik:
I'm currently failing in reaching any of the VMs via their interfaces
connected to the 1.2.3.128/25. I've configured firewall rules to allow ICMP
echo requests as well as TCP ports 80 and 443 for destinations in that
subnet on the
Hi all,
first: I'm not really a network guy, but thanks to pfSense was able
to some advanced (at least by my measures) stuff by myself - until
now... So please be patient with me.
A Vmware host machine has 1 NIC and uses 1 public IP itself.
A second public IP (say 4.3.2.17/32) is used for the
Now I'm trying to segment the /24 into 4 subnets with the pfSense interfaces
being:
It sounds easy enough - but may be because I'm not understanding exactly what
you want.
But the simplest method I could come up with would be to setup your WAN to
accept every IP your ISP routes to you, then
Am 23.05.2011 um 23:25 schrieb Tim Dickson:
Now I'm trying to segment the /24 into 4 subnets with the pfSense interfaces
being:
It sounds easy enough
Maybe for you… ;-)
- but may be because I'm not understanding exactly what you want.
But the simplest method I could come up with would
On Mon, May 23, 2011 at 4:14 PM, Andreas Kaiser di...@binary-punks.com wrote:
That allows you to do any routing you want between interfaces / WAN and
gives you granular control of everything.
*That* is exactly what I want ;-)
Have you turned off automatic outbound NAT and disabled or
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