Tim:

Perhaps my diagram was not clear, I intended to have 2 external
and distinct IP's to the outside world;
I modified the diagram to add 2 faked IP addresses to see if
it makes more sense now.

In the example,
204.101.251.2 is configured for ShareTheNet, which you can 
open "inbound services" to HTTP/SMTP/POP3/Telnet,TCP-443, 
to reach your linux server #1 inside the firewall 
(STN is a NAT firewall).
Hence server #1 (apache) is fully visible to 
the outside world as https://204.101.251.2/

204.101.251.1 goes to NT-server, in the diagram, I called it 
"NT-multi-homed" server. 
http://204.101.251.1/ will arrive at the NT-box.

Your requirement that both servers are accessible from
the outside world clients can be achieved.

Other requirement that the servers can pass traffic and share
files with internal network, that is possible since all their
routing tables have route to 192.168.10.0 (netmask 255.255.255.0)

The biggest headache is probably with the DNS service.
I presmue you have DNS server on linux, 
STN also acts as as DNS forwarder,
NT can do that too, so you have to figure out how to avoid
DNS conflicts. If you can, use DNS service provided by your ISP
so all your machines DNS can point to them.
There are a number of free DNS servcie on the net.

nicholas fong
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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