Mann, Bradley wrote:
The webserver is also listening on localhost:8080 as far as I know. If I
open a browser and navigate to http://localhost:8080 on the server
machine, I am able to access my web page. However, these rules appear to
have no affect:
rdr bge0 0.0.0.0/0 port 80 -> 0.0.0.0 port 8080
rdr bge0 0.0.0.0/0 port 443 -> 0.0.0.0 port 8443
Can you see any reason why these shouldn't work?
You mention you are using Solaris - Don't expect a redirect to ever make
it to localhost, it doesn't work.
That aside, why do you define the destination address as 0.0.0.0 -
surely that is going to fail.
I would suggest you remove ipf rules from the equation by not loading
them or at least not defining any and only having ipnat rules.
The following works for me on an OpenBSD 3.3 system with IP Filter
3.4.35 installed.
rdr sis0 0/0 port 80 -> 192.168.54.9 port 8080
where sis0 is my internal interface and 192.168.54.9 is the address of sis0.
httpd is only listening on port 8080 and it works - see trimmed output
from ipnat -l.
bash-2.05b# ipnat -l |grep 80 ; netstat -anf inet | grep 80
rdr sis0 0.0.0.0/0 port 80 -> 192.168.54.9 port 8080 tcp
RDR 192.168.54.9 8080 <- -> 192.168.54.9 80 [192.168.54.114 2766]
RDR 192.168.54.9 8080 <- -> 192.168.54.9 80 [192.168.54.114 2765]
tcp 0 0 192.168.54.9.8080 192.168.54.114.2766
ESTABLISHED
tcp 0 0 192.168.54.9.8080 192.168.54.114.2765
ESTABLISHED
tcp 0 0 *.8080 *.* LISTEN
Have you verified with a browser that http://<ip-address of bge0>:8080
works?
Larry.