Originally posted by: Kristi2k
How would this be done if this was in a corporate environment? Such as, an ISP assigns the company 3 public IP's.
1 IP would go to a webserver, another to email and the other for internet use.
Originally posted by: Goosemaster
Originally posted by: Kristi2k
How would this be done if this was in a corporate environment? Such as, an ISP assigns the company 3 public IP's.
1 IP would go to a webserver, another to email and the other for internet use.
Dynamic or static, and with or without NAT?
With NAT, you would create a pool encompassing the range or create three seperate entries. Then you would assign them to the outside for a specific internal PC's inside address.
Originally posted by: martind1
you can just go, modem->switch then in the swtich connect the 2 servers and a router which has all other pcs behind it. piece of cake.
but then again if you only have 1 webserver and 1 email server then you only really need 1 ip address, and might not have to pay for the 3 ip addressess.
Originally posted by: jjoyner
Originally posted by: Goosemaster
Originally posted by: Kristi2k
How would this be done if this was in a corporate environment? Such as, an ISP assigns the company 3 public IP's.
1 IP would go to a webserver, another to email and the other for internet use.
Dynamic or static, and with or without NAT?
With NAT, you would create a pool encompassing the range or create three seperate entries. Then you would assign them to the outside for a specific internal PC's inside address.
Correct! Give Goose a cigar. NAT masks your internal networking...
To assign 3 pc/servers external IPs, simply enable their exposure in the firewall and assign them their static IPs. I am assuming you have a T1/DSU off smartjack. I hope you don't have 3 IPs on DSL or cable, that kinda underminds the technology.
I would NEVER recommend having a production server directly connected to the internet. Hell, the same goes for everything besides a firewall.