Checked the firewall, and set the static IP.
Anyone have an idea what the limitations put forth by 2003 would be?
On Thu, Apr 8, 2010 at 3:12 PM, m.roth@5-cent.us wrote:
On 4/8/2010 1:57 PM, David Lemcoe wrote:
Hello all. I'm in the process of making a small server farm based mostly on Windows Server 2003. For simplicity's sake, the only non-2003 server will be a CentOS 5.4 server running only vsftpd, httpd, and mysqld. My plan is to have this server in a 2003 Server's network receiving a DHCP address from the Domain Controller.
<snip> >> * *Machine 4* - CentOS 5.4 - On same network as other clients, hosts >> web server. >> o Does *NOT *receive DHCP address or DNS information. >> o Has *no *internet access >> o NAT does *NOT *forward correctly. >> >> I am looking for a solution to get the CentOS server on the network like >> the other clients. > > Centos works normally with standard DHCP servers and obviously would > know nothing about upstream NAT handling. There must be some sort of > restriction imposed by the Windows server in this scenario.
The only thing I can think of on the Linux side are firewall rules.
mark
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