Hi Moshe,
Thanks for the help but am I doing something wrong? I'm testing pfsense
and your method works if I set the redirect target IP to the pfsense box
but not the server I actually want to point it at (it just doesn't
respond at all). Do I need to change anything on the server or some kind
of log I can see of why it's not reaching the destination I put in?
Thanks again.
On 3/10/11 7:44 PM, Moshe Katz wrote:
Hi,
The way I understood it, you are trying to redirect INTERNAL computers
that try to access 74.125.224.214 to your server but allow your server
access to that IP.
There is no easy way to do this in 1.2.x. However, in 2.0, you should
be able to do this with Port Forwarding. Try a Port Forward Rule
similar to the following:
* Interface: LAN
* Source: NOT Your Server IP
* Dest: 74.125.224.214
* Dest. Port Range: an alias that contains 80 and 443
* Redirect Target IP: Your Server IP
* Redirect Target Port: Same alias as above
Moshe
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Moshe Katz
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On Thu, Mar 10, 2011 at 8:44 PM, Anthony Saenz
anth...@consumertrack.com mailto:anth...@consumertrack.com wrote:
Hi,
I'm new to pfsense and so far haven't found a way to do the following:
I'm trying to route traffic on ports 80/443 going to a public IP
(in this case let's say 74.125.224.214) to a box we have
internally here in the office but if that box itself tries to hit
the IP, allow it to pass through to the intended destination. Is
this at all possible or is there another medium that would allow
me to do this?
Thanks!
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