well yes it can be a walkaround but i'm looking for something in firewall level.
On 5/20/05, Johnny Hughes mailing-lists@hughesjr.com wrote:
On Fri, 2005-05-20 at 22:14 +0800, Mark Quitoriano wrote:
how can i do this? about my problem how can i tell firewall if the source is 10.0.0.1 and sending it to 10.0.0/24 he well send it to eth1 interface?
there's no such thing as -j eth1 right?
What I do is have an internal DNS server that does internal IPS for my domain (it is listed as Primary, no secondaries, for my domain). Internally, mail.hughesjr.com has the internal address .... externally it real address.
Internal clients point to the internal DNS server (and internal IP) ... external clients point to the external IP.
On 5/20/05, Mark Quitoriano markquitoriano@gmail.com wrote:
hi guys i got another problem...
as i said the last post i used john's syntax for my iptables and it worked fine outside the internet but my local user can't access it on there browser.
BodyID:163248065.2.n.logpart (stored separately)
CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos