Gabriel Regis wrote:

[]
> if connection cames in port 5900 it wil connect to 10.0.0139 else
> if connection cames in port 5800 it wil connect to 10.0.0140 and so on
> 
> but how can I connect at different ports in my Viewer???

You need to forward ports on your router (external IP) to
ports on your internal machines. Say you run VNC on the default
port (5800) on each internal PC, you need to forward a port
on your router to port 5800 on each machine you're running
VNC on. This would be a lot easier if you had static IPs on
your internal machines. Let me do an example with 3 internal
machines:

 PC_1(10.0.0.100)  VNC running on port 5800
 PC_2(10.0.0.101)  VNC running on port 5800
 PC_3(10.0.0.102)  VNC running on port 5800
 
Router config should be:

 Forward port 5801->PC_1 port 5800
 Forward port 5802->PC_2 port 5800
 Forward port 5803->PC_3 port 5800

(how to do this depends on your router)

Then from your office, you can connect to your router's IP
address (this is 1000% easier if it's static - if it's dynamic,
you need some way of discovering it, but that's not really
a VNC issue) with VNCviewer. Connecting to ROUTER:1 will
attach you to PC_1, connecting to ROUTER:2 will give you PC_2
etc. (where ROUTER is the IP address of your router).

I wouldn't really recommend this without some form of encrypted
tunnel, or an encrypted protocol version of VNC.

-- 
Illtud Daniel                                 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Uwch Ddadansoddwr Systemau                       Senior Systems Analyst
Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru                  National Library of Wales
Yn siarad drosof fy hun, nid LlGC   -  Speaking personally, not for NLW
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