Re: Seeing the Internet through a firewall

2001-03-02 Thread J Roysdon
I've never heard of reverse NAT... care to elaborate how it works? ;-p -- Jason Roysdon, CCNP+Security/CCDP, MCSE, CNA, Network+, A+ List email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Homepage: http://jason.artoo.net/ Cisco resources: http://r2cisco.artoo.net/ ""Kenneth"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message 97hnh5

Re: Seeing the Internet through a firewall

2001-03-01 Thread kent . hundley
Howard, The architecture of a security perimeter depends a lot on your particular policies, so you should really do some research on what sorts of traffic you want to allow in and out of your network. However, a quick and dirty solution that should work for most small networks like you descr

Re: Seeing the Internet through a firewall

2001-02-27 Thread Kenneth
you might want to try real firewalls that provide a DMZ port. But if you can't and if this is just a single webserver, you can use PAT (reverse NAT). Search for it on the Cisco site to get more info on how to implement this. "Howard Yuan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message 97hhuk$o78$[EMAIL PRO

Seeing the Internet through a firewall

2001-02-27 Thread Howard Yuan
Hi, I'm trying to put a firewall into my company's router. They have a webserver which hosts their webpage and every computer on the Internet has the ability to see the Internet through the router. What lines would I need to put into an access-list to keep the webserver seen and reachable, and