If the CLI on your HP 2910 is anything like the other HP products I've
used it's pretty straightforward.

If you want it to route between VLANs 10 and 11:

ip routing
vlan 10 ip address 172.30.10.1/24
vlan 11 ip address 172.30.11.1/24

In this case 172.30.10.1 and 172.30.11.1 would be the default gateways
for the respective subnets.

"Port forwarding" is only relevant if you are also doing NAT.

On 1/24/2011 12:49 PM, Steve Ens wrote:
> I usually use the CLI for initial config, setting up an IP address, name
> it, etc.  But then I turn to the java gui if I need anything else.  I'll
> dig into the CLI a little to see what is possible.  I have a 10.0.0.x/24
> network that needs to have access to certain ports on a server that is
> on a 192.168.1.x/24 network.  Corporate Lan -> broadcast network. 
> Should be easy, and should work with a simple router, BUT the
> application involved apparently needs to see the IP address directly, so
> I'm not even sure that port forwarding will work.  I may need to pull
> the machines off the corporate LAN and stick them on the "other side",
> and then give them access to the corporate LAN. 

-- 

Phil Brutsche
p...@optimumdata.com

~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ <http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/>  ~

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