Edit your local machines hosts file and add entries for:
mydomain.com 192.168.X.1
Myotherdomain.com 192.168.X.2
The only problem with this is that for a large organization with many
machines, it needs to be done on every machine. For developer testing on a
few machines it is not a bad solution. It could also be done with an
internal DNS zone I believe but a small home network is not likely to have
an internal DNS server.
Dave
> -----Original Message-----
> From: rjspence [mailto:rjspence at tampabay dot rr dot com]
> Sent: Friday, May 14, 2004 8:41 PM
> To: m0n0wall at lists dot m0n0 dot ch
> Subject: [m0n0wall] How do you do this?
>
> I've read the monowall docs that state that you cannot access
> domain from the internal networks. I've taken the suggestions
> provided for a workaround and can access the server via IP.
> However, this poses the issue of some of the scripts needing
> actual domain names for configuration. As such, I have
> configured them by IP. Question is, it's mentioned that there
> will be no "bounce" feature. How can it be done in such away
> that your external domain can be accessed? leaving it as IP's
> show the external IP for the site and not not the Tld. Anyone
> have a work around for accessing your pages via domain behind
> a monowall setup?
>
> Thank you,
> rjspence
>
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