Tomomark,
It sounds like you have a router that give you internet connectivity. Is this right? If this is the case, you probably do NOT need two nics. You broadband router should get an IP address from your ISP. (You probably don't need an address from your ISP seeing how you only need one connection to the internet.) [By the way, if you do NOT have a router, you will need two nics.]
So, your router gets an IP address from your ISP. Then you need to configure your router NOT to hand out DHCP addresses. You should configure a LAN address for your router...say 10.x.x.1
- Then you should configure your domain (OFF the NETWORK...without connection to the internet) Make the first DC IP address something like 10.x.x.10
- Configure DHCP to hand out addresses in the 10.x.x.20 to 10.x.x.100 range. Also configure the scope or server options to point DNS to 10.x.x.10. also configure the gateway to be the IP of the inside of you router (10.x.x.1)
- Configure your DNS server to forward DNS request to the ISP's DNS's servers. To do this, you will have to delete the "." root zone in your DNS adminstrative console.
- You should be good to go...hope this helps
Joseph L. Poandl
MCSE 2000
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