[CentOS] Centos 6 - Networking: Some Queries -- GURUS HELP PL

Fri Jun 15 13:03:14 UTC 2012
Les Mikesell <lesmikesell at gmail.com>

On Fri, Jun 15, 2012 at 12:51 AM, Sanjay Arora <sanjay.k.arora at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>>
>> You still don't say what kind of access you need
>
> Basically accessing the VMs from the Internet....ssh, vnc, rdp, ftp &
> so on...different needs for different vm.

You should be able to make outbound connections that originate from
the VMs through NAT.    Direct inbound connections over the internet
are impossible without a public address. or at least port-forwarding
configured on the router - which it will probably only do to its own
subnet.    You could tunnel access through a VPN, though.  OpenVPN on
your server would be able to make an outbound connection through the
nat to another site and you could route the private addresses through
the VPN tunnel.   Without support on the router, your VPN can only
connect to pre-arranged public IP addresses.  If you can get a single
port (preferably UDP) forwarded on the router to your server, you
would be able to connect from anywhere with an openvpn client which
would be able to route for that host or for a remote site.

>> - or why you can't
>> bridge on the 172.16.1.0 side which eliminates half of the problem.
>> Outbound connections are easy - your LTSP clients probably already
>> have that via NAT on the server, and they also should be using the
>> server as their default gateway.
>
> Yes LTSP has outward NAT access...require the same inward access there too...

What about the server?  Do you have any existing way set up for inward
connections to it?    If so, you can use a VPN or ssh port-forwarding,
or reverse-proxy connections where a vpn will be the most generic.
However, you have to be just as careful about firewalling such
connections as at the main router you are trying to bypass.   It is a
bad idea to do this without support from your network administrator.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
     lesmikesell at gmail.com