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> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, October 05,
> 2000 8:42 PM
>
> Dgianna,
>
> If you perform this, then what is the static route on the
> gateway going to
> look like when the destination packet is destined for 4 or 5
> physical servers?
>
> Thomas Poole
Somewhat irrelevant. You need the static route to route through the
firewall, remember NAT occurs last on inbound connections (on the
internal I/F). In my case, I have a static route set up to the
default machine, not the others. However, the route is not important
once the packet hits the wire. When I first tinkered with this, I
thought that there maybe was an ICMP redirect that bounced the packet
off the default and onto the target machine. I checked, there is
none. Even with the machine, that is defined in the route entry,
turned off, packets will still hit the other servers.
Regards,
Frank
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