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Just as a side note, there is an excellent tool called xrdp. Runs on linux, and it emulates an rdp server (so you can connect with it from an rdp client) While it will helpfully connect you to the local machine xrdp lives on, it's also capable of (once you have connected) creating a connection to another machine inside the network, via either rdp OR vnc, making it an effective vnc/rdp proxy as well as a local linux rdp server. This, then, is how I use it. One port forward over one ip, yet I gain access to all my rdp and vnc capable hosts. Quite a deal. Jonathan D. Simpson -----Original Message----- From: Alex [mailto:alex dot hofstetter at wagenborg dot com] Sent: Thursday, February 15, 2007 12:52 AM To: Cheyenne Deal Cc: m0n0wall Subject: Re: [m0n0wall] VNC and m0n0wall Just add a NAT rule, it will automatically offer to add a rule on the WAN interface. If you want to use VNC to reach more than 1 Workstation you'll also have to add more NAT entries with different ports. Connect VNC to your WAN address with the port used in the NAT rule and it should work fine. Regards, Alex. ----- From: Cheyenne Deal Date: Thu, 15 Feb 2007 10:36 +0500 Msg: WBUSER-8341335 Subject: [m0n0wall] VNC and m0n0wall To: m0n0wall How do I configure m0n0wall for incoming vnc connections to a computer(s) behind it? I knew using a regular router but now here I do not know how? --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: m0n0wall dash unsubscribe at lists dot m0n0 dot ch For additional commands, e-mail: m0n0wall dash help at lists dot m0n0 dot ch |