>>"All the Nokia knows uses for pinholling is: incomming connection on
>>port
>>XXXX with protocol YY."
Part of the pinhole is the local IP of the machine on the network that the
information is to be forwarded to. At least, thats how the M10 and M11
worked.
You should have 4 parts to the pinhole:
1) name (just a name for the pinhole itself)
2) protocol (obvious)
3) external port start/end (the router's real-world IP's port number where
the connection take place)
4) Internal address (IP of the local machine the packets are being forwarded
to)
-----Original Message-----
From: Nicholas Lee
To: Sean Glasspool
Cc: ADSL Email list
Sent: 6/11/00 17:12
Subject: Re: More than one DHCP address using a port?
> Yeah, but I want more than on internal address to use one port. For
example,
> you cant have in pinholing 192.168.1.1 and 192.168.1.2 using the same
port?
How does the Nokia determine which IP to forward traffic on port XXX
too?
All the Nokia knows uses for pinholling is: incomming connection on
port
XXXX with protocol YY.
You need a secondary machine internal the the Nokia to handle the
traffic.
ie. as Rob says, a application level proxy between the client machines
and
the Nokia.
Nicholas
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Received on Mon Nov 6 22:03:53 2000