On 2007/08/15 16:01, Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
I am PRETTY sure there is no way to do a pf rdr command based on a hostname
and I am just trying to confirm this
confirmed.
Maybe I could somehow use hostated?
What I want to do is have 4 seprate Windows XP Professional workstations
with
hello misc@
I am PRETTY sure there is no way to do a pf rdr command based on a hostname
and I am just trying to confirm this
Maybe I could somehow use hostated?
What I want to do is have 4 seprate Windows XP Professional workstations
with 192.168.x.x address behind a pf firewall
and be able to
change port RDP listens on:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/306759
configure the Remote Desktop client to connect to a specific port:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/304304/
I looked those up a while ago to get access using the Rdesktop package
OBSD has. Truly excellent package...
HTH,
Bryan
I think you can do that with squid, but better change port numbers of
rdp servers and clients.
Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
hello misc@
I am PRETTY sure there is no way to do a pf rdr command based on a hostname
and I am just trying to confirm this
Maybe I could somehow use hostated?
What I want
dang it... once more, for feeling...
change port RDP listens on:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/306759
configure the Remote Desktop client to connect to a specific port:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/304304/
I looked those up a while ago to get access using the Rdesktop package
OBSD has.
Sam Fourman Jr. wrote:
hello misc@
I am PRETTY sure there is no way to do a pf rdr command based on a hostname
and I am just trying to confirm this
Maybe I could somehow use hostated?
What I want to do is have 4 seprate Windows XP Professional workstations
with 192.168.x.x address behind
Nick Holland wrote:
as stated, you can't do what you want to do the way you propose doing it.
To be specific, if you want to have multiple sites behind one IP address
and one port, you need an application proxy. With http, you can do this
with host headers and a reverse http proxy. You
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jens Teglhus
Mxller
Sent: Monday, December 12, 2005 5:16 PM
To: misc@openbsd.org
Subject: Re: Just confirming: no way to do a pf rdr based on hostname?
Peter Landry wrote:
Hi All,
We're migrating an old
Hi All,
We're migrating an old Microsoft ISA Server system to OpenBSD pf. First
off, before I ask any questions, kudos to everyone -- Installing OpenBSD
3.8 was a very pleasant, painless experience for someone who's never
used it before. Setting up pf/nat was also extraordinarily easy. The
docs
On 12/12/05, Peter Landry [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm thinking that I can't do it. In that case, my options seem to be 1)
use different external IP's for each website, and redirect to different
internal servers based on IP 2) redirect all web traffic to the legacy
ISA system, which will then
On 12. des. 2005, at 22.44, Peter Landry wrote:
Hi All,
We're migrating an old Microsoft ISA Server system to OpenBSD pf.
First
off, before I ask any questions, kudos to everyone -- Installing
OpenBSD
3.8 was a very pleasant, painless experience for someone who's never
used it before.
Peter Landry wrote:
I'm thinking that I can't do it. In that case, my options seem to be 1)
use different external IP's for each website, and redirect to different
internal servers based on IP 2) redirect all web traffic to the legacy
ISA system, which will then redirect based on hostname.
Peter Landry wrote:
Hi All,
We're migrating an old Microsoft ISA Server system to OpenBSD pf. First
off, before I ask any questions, kudos to everyone -- Installing OpenBSD
3.8 was a very pleasant, painless experience for someone who's never
used it before. Setting up pf/nat was also
On 12/12/05, Peter Landry [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
... Are there any options I haven't thought of?
httpd in reverse proxy mode?
CK
--
GDB has a 'break' feature; why doesn't it have 'fix' too?
Peter Landry wrote:
Hi All,
We're migrating an old Microsoft ISA Server system to OpenBSD pf. First
off, before I ask any questions, kudos to everyone -- Installing OpenBSD
3.8 was a very pleasant, painless experience for someone who's never
used it before. Setting up pf/nat was also
On Monday 12 December 2005 22:44, Peter Landry wrote:
Just something i heard, and didn't even look into:
1) reverse proxy
2) have apache act as a proxy with redirect.
Just some ideas to look into and comment on by more knowledgeable ;)
--
viq
On Mon, Dec 12, 2005 at 04:44:05PM -0500, Peter Landry wrote:
That aside, the only thing that I haven't been able to migrate yet is
ISA's ability to redirect web requests coming in on the same IP to
different machines based on the host name. IE- www.a.com (IP
123.123.0.1) gets redirected to
On 12/12/05, Peter Landry [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi All,
We're migrating an old Microsoft ISA Server system to OpenBSD pf. First
off, before I ask any questions, kudos to everyone -- Installing OpenBSD
3.8 was a very pleasant, painless experience for someone who's never
used it before.
Peter Landry wrote:
Hi All,
We're migrating an old Microsoft ISA Server system to OpenBSD pf. First
off, before I ask any questions, kudos to everyone -- Installing OpenBSD
3.8 was a very pleasant, painless experience for someone who's never
used it before. Setting up pf/nat was also
Peter Landry wrote:
Hi All,
We're migrating an old Microsoft ISA Server system to OpenBSD pf. First
off, before I ask any questions, kudos to everyone -- Installing OpenBSD
3.8 was a very pleasant, painless experience for someone who's never
used it before. Setting up pf/nat was also
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