Hi again to everyone;
Guys your mails are very nice... i liked all of them...
let me give you about my system and my need(sorry for writing these late)...
I've got an IBM x3650 server which is open 7d/24h. It has got 2 ethernet card. I would like to connect my LAN to WAN over this machine...
LAN(there are 3machines): start ip:192.168.10.10 end ip: 192.168.10.12 gateway address of users:192.168.10.13(my server's LAN side ip address) LAN side Server ip: 192.168.10.13
WAN(this ip comes from behind of swicth. the switch is behind of firewall and firewall is behind of router): WAN side Server ip: 10.10.1.223 gateway address of Server:10.10.1.111
this is my network chances...:( i cant change them cause our company has strong rules for these addresses... I want to share my WAN side ip address to my LAN side...
How can I do that on my CENTos installed server?
thanks a lot to everybody...
2008/1/22, Dennis McLeod dmcleod@foranyauto.com:
I have an IPcop box setup at work. Using squidguard to keep customers from surfing porn while they are in our waiting room. (On a completely separate DSL connection..)
I have an Astaro Security Gateway setup at home (on a Dell p3 precision 220). Free home license, do FAR more than your typical broadband router. Not a small learning curve, though. Wireless is through a D-link DWL-7100(I think) access point in the attic. I have a Linksys wrt54g (original version) with openWRT, but it's just there for backup.....
Any of the above will accomplish your goal...
-----Original Message----- From: centos-bounces@centos.org [mailto:centos-bounces@centos.org] On Behalf Of Alain Spineux Sent: Tuesday, January 22, 2008 6:52 AM To: CentOS mailing list Subject: Re: [CentOS] How can i share my WAN ip to my LAN?
On Jan 22, 2008 3:17 PM, William L. Maltby CentOS4Bill@triad.rr.com wrote:
On Tue, 2008-01-22 at 14:49 +0100, Alain Spineux wrote:
On Jan 22, 2008 8:46 AM, Tolun ARDAHANLI <tolun.ardahanli@linux.org.tr
wrote:
Hi everybody...
How can I share my WAN ip to my LAN? How can I do that I really dont know...:( I am using linux long time ago but this kind I would like to do newly...
Buy a small router/modem, ask your ISP for suggestions. This is cheap (<100$), no need to keep your computer always turned on, very easy to configure if you nead more features (port forwarding for skype, games, p2p, ....), have some builtint feature (dhcp, DNS proxy). Also think about wireless ...... This is probably more secure, not because centos/linux is not, but because you dont know what you are doing.
Of course this is less fun
Well, I wasn't going to suggest, but since the topic of alternatives is open...
:-)
Of course the main idea is to avoid to have a non firewall dedicated linux (like centos is) configured by someone without to much network knowledge be in front of Internet.
If you have an older available computer laying around, check out IPCop
http://www.ipcop.org/
free, has lots of features, runs reliably, I've been on it for years, as have others on this list. Biggest gripe I have is docs could be a little better - they tend to not get updated to stay up with the
software.
Regards.
Can anybody help me about IP sharing in Centos?
thanks alot...
-- Tolun ARDAHANLI Bilgisayar Muhendisi E-posta:tolun.ardahanli@linux.org.tr Icq:326600
Tolun ARDAHANLI Computer Engineer E-mail:tolun.ardahanli@linux.org.tr Icq:326600
<snip sig stuff>
HTH
Bill
CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
-- Alain Spineux aspineux gmail com May the sources be with you _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
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