At 12:42 PM -0600 12/2/04, Mike Hebel issued a series of ones and zeros which decoded as: >On Thursday, December 2, 2004, at 12:23 PM, Warren Michelsen wrote: > >>> >>>One is a DSL Modem/Router unit (which is really just a Router, but for >>>sake of clarity, I'll refered to it as the combo). This unit the WAN port >>>is a DSL interface. >> >>I thought we'd established that this is NOT what I want. DSL is not Ethernet. >>My connection is Ethernet, NOT DSL. > >What he's referring to is that some "DSL" routers are actually designed to >plug into the ethernet port of a DSL modem rather than directly into the phone >line.
I'm sure some are but he specifically said the WAN port is DSL. > >I've found that most routers - even home ones - allow you to do things like >port forwarding which allows servers to be run behind NAT. I need more than that. I run twp web servers, so simply forwarding port 80 to somewhere is not going to cut it. I need multiple, public IPs to show. > >Actually I just static route my machines on my IPs. The router passes the IPs >in unchecked That sounds like what I need. >and I put internal firewalls/NAT services on them as needed. ? "Them' meaning IPs? You can block given ports and incoming IPs from reaching your network IPs? I have a /28 subnet. When configuring machines on my subnet, I use xx.xx.xx.129 as the gateway address. If I have my own router, will this be the address of the LAN port on it? ############################################################# This message is sent to you because you are subscribed to the mailing list <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>. To unsubscribe, E-mail to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To switch to the DIGEST mode, E-mail to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To switch to the INDEX mode, E-mail to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Send administrative queries to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
