The fixup will requite the people outside to use that port also. He is
looking for (PAM) Port Address Mapping. It will be available in the 6.0
version hopefully to be shipping in March/April.
Tim
----- Original Message -----
From: "Nabil Fares" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Scott M. Trieste" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, February 23, 2001 9:45 AM
Subject: RE: Port Redirection
Hi Scott,
You can add fixup protocol to point port whatever:
fixup protocol http 4003
The trick about fixup is that it examines the http protocol for any other
embedded protocols (I hope this made some sense!). This is just another way
to deploy http server on different port then 80. I'm really not sure
whether this works for your scenario or not.
HTH,
Nabil
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
Scott M. Trieste
Sent: Thursday, February 22, 2001 5:55 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Port Redirection
Colleagues,
I am trying to achieve port redirection on a PIX-520. We have an
application that only accepts connections on a user-definable port but some
of our customers don't allow any inbound traffic other than 80/443.
Is there any way to redirect inbound (port 80) traffic to a user-definable
port(ie 4003). If possible, I'd like to make this happen on a PIX-520. My
feeling is that a feature of NAT will allow me to do this.
Any insight is appreciated.
Thanks in advance.
-Scott M. Trieste
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