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David A. Ranch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Fuzzy Fox mentioned port forwardin but I'm not sure if this is what you
> want. When you forward port 23 to an internal machine. Thats it..
> the port is used. There are ways around this like:
>
> remote #1 telnets to port 24 --forwards--> internal #1 port 23
> remote #2 telnets to port 25 --forwards--> internal #1 port 23
> remote #3 telnets to port 26 --forwards--> internal #1 port 23
If I understand port-forwarding correctly (which may not be the case),
you can forward different IP's using the same port, to different
machines. For instance, you can forward IP#1, port 23, to machine1, and
IP#2, port 23, to machine2, etc.
All that's needed, then, is to set up virtual interfaces to respond to
those different IP's. As long as there are masq rules that match all
the different IP's, the port-forwarding code can set up tunnels for
them.
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Fuzzy Fox) || "Just about every computer on the market
sometimes known as David DeSimone || today runs Unix, except the Mac (and
http://www.dallas.net/~fox/ || nobody cares about it). -- Bill Joy '85
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