But it can still be a router if it does not do natting, a router with
only public IP's
Cezary Morga wrote:
Dnia Eroda, 15 paE:dziernika 2008, cgc napisaE:
And any box that is doing packet filtering between 2 or more
networks, eg. a private network and the internet, is a router as far
as
PROTECTED]
Enviada em: quarta-feira, 15 de outubro de 2008 16:21
Para: Ricardo Augusto de Souza
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Assunto: Re: RES: RES: Filtering outgoing connections in pf
What exactly are you trying to achieve? what pc's do you want to have
access to what ports? Are you just allowing
-
De: cgc [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Enviada em: quarta-feira, 15 de outubro de 2008 15:49
Para: Ricardo Augusto de Souza
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Assunto: Re: RES: Filtering outgoing connections in pf
let me give you an example, if you
Augusto de Souza
Cc: misc@openbsd.org
Assunto: Re: RES: Filtering outgoing connections in pf
let me give you an example, if you just want 10.10.0.0/16 to have port 80
access then you need 3 rules:
#the nat
nat on $ext_if from 10.10.0.0/16 to any port 80 - ($ext_if)
#allow through $int_if
Dnia Eroda, 15 paE:dziernika 2008, cgc napisaE:
And any box that is doing packet filtering between 2 or more
networks, eg. a private network and the internet, is a router as far
as I am aware
If it's natting or filtering packets it's a gateway.
--
Cezary Morga
If you live to be one hundred,
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