Thank you. However, I think I found the real problem. Turns out the default gateway on the Webserver was not to my OpenBSD firewall. I was reconfiguring my network and must have overlooked it. It now works fine.
Once again, thank you anyways!
I am setting up an OpenBSD 3.8 machine to use as a firewall and to provide NAT. I also need it to forward port 80 to an internal machine on my LAN. The NAT works fine, but I can't seem to get it to forward the traffic to my Webserver. I can access this server via the LAN from its internal IP...
I think I might just go the route of adding a user to each group, even though it doesn't seem to be the best solution. I'll post if I find anything better, thanks for your responses.
I see what you're saying, and I would set up a terms of service agreement and probably put something like that in there. However, I would rather not get things to the point at which I am telling people exactly what they can chmod their files to. Also, I would rather it not be possible too.
I am setting up a server running Gentoo for Web, Mail, SMTP, IMAP, MySQL, and possibly DNS hosting. I will be hosting my own site, as well as a few domains for some friends. My plan is to give each Website a unique group, so that the site can have multiple members with permission to change it...
You should check things out for yourself, but I personally use Gentoo as both a workstation and server, and I like it. It lets you have a lot of control over how you want to customize your install, and lets you tweak packages for your particular hardware (of course, you don't have to do that if...
You can find a diagram of my network at this link:
http://www1.whatsmykarma.com:3000/network-diagram.jpg
Right now I can ping hosts from one subnet to the other, and I can access the Internet from hosts on both subnets.
Thanks guys. I changed the address of the second interface to 192.168.2.1. However I still need to be able to forward ports to a server on the second subnet, due to the router firmware (for the sake of keeping this discussion relevant to this forum, I will simply say that I do not wish to try...
I'm doing dynamic DNS currenlty. I was just wondering how much it actually costs to get an IP. It seems kind of nice to just buy it once and be independent then. Although I suppose you'd still have to pay for a connection to the backbone.
Sorry about this, I'm a bit of a n00b when it comes to routing... I tried this question in the Linksys section, but haven't gotten an answer yet. At any rate it isn't too specific to those products for the most part.
My network has two subnets, 192.168.1.0, and 192.168.2.0. I have a Linksys...
I'm just curious, but does anyone know how much it costs to actually purchase an IP address (or range of them) from ICANN? I've Googled around, but can't seem to find anything.
I have a Linksys WRT54G router, which I have connected to the Internet via a cable modem. I have a couple computers running Linux that are acting as servers (Web, mail, SSH, etc) and have their appropriate ports forwarded. What I would like to do is set up a subnet with another Linux computer...
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