Yes thats what I am looking for.
Just one more question. If I use Server Nat and Outbound I can have Outbound
connections use the public IP I set and yet limit the incoming ports on that
IP Correct?
----- Original Message -----
From: "Chris Buechler" <cbuechler at gmail dot com>
Cc: <m0n0wall at lists dot m0n0 dot ch>
Sent: Thursday, May 11, 2006 11:26 PM
Subject: Re: [m0n0wall] Questions
On 5/11/06, Jason [WeatherServer] <Jason at weatherserver dot net> wrote:
> I'm likely about to answer myself but i'm going to ask anyways,
>
> My ISP just gave me a /29 routed subnet Now i've been able to setup my
> going connections on 1 computer to use one of the IP's using advanced
> outbound NAT. It is that easy to route all incoming port connections from
> one of those IP's to a computer on the network.
>
If you're fine with using NAT, remove your outbound NAT entries and
use 1:1 NAT. It's meant for precisely what you're describing
(translating one public IP to one private IP, in both directions)
unless I'm misunderstanding what you're after.
-Chris
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