My customer has a Cisco 1720 on a frame relay connection that he has configuration access to.
Presently it is configured to have a 192.168 address on its internal interface and does nat using a small pool of real ip addresses.
I need to put a server in this network that will be accessed from the outside world
Two ways I can do this: map an ip address inward, or have the server actually use one of the real ip addresses on one of its interfaces. For a number of reasons I'd prefer to do the latter rather than mapping an address inward. This server can take on the nat function also.
So- ideally- I'd like the Cisco to not do nat and basically just "get out of the way"- allow this server to be the gateway for the internal network.
If that's not possible, I will settle for mapping inward..
Tony Lawrence
SCO Unix/Linux Resources tony@pcunix.com
Presently it is configured to have a 192.168 address on its internal interface and does nat using a small pool of real ip addresses.
I need to put a server in this network that will be accessed from the outside world
Two ways I can do this: map an ip address inward, or have the server actually use one of the real ip addresses on one of its interfaces. For a number of reasons I'd prefer to do the latter rather than mapping an address inward. This server can take on the nat function also.
So- ideally- I'd like the Cisco to not do nat and basically just "get out of the way"- allow this server to be the gateway for the internal network.
If that's not possible, I will settle for mapping inward..
Tony Lawrence
SCO Unix/Linux Resources tony@pcunix.com