Re: port forwarding
On Jul 14, 9:10 am, Ryan Hanisco
<RyanHani...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
> NEwbie,
>
> Debo is right that you can take care of this with RRAS. I will tell you
> that this is generally a bad idea as it is a back door into your network. If
> this machine is compromised in any way, it means that an attacker or program
> will have access into your internal network. Not a very good thing.
>
> Most people will enforce more solid boundaries by segmenting machines into
> internal and external resources. You should look at your security
> requirements and the reisk you are willing to take with the machine. I would
> also suggest letting your router or firewall do that conditional forwarding
> to the server rather than having the server do it. You'll get much better
> perfromance letting a device that is built for that do it as well as the
> additional security that comes from the platform.
>
> Hope this helps.
> --
> Ryan Hanisco
> MCSE, MCTS: SQL 2005, Project+
> Chicago, IL
>
> Remember: Marking helpful answers helps everyone find the info they need
> quickly.
>
>
>
> "Newbie" wrote:
> > Hello,
>
> > We have Windows 2003 Server w/2 NICs.
> > One nic is for internal, and the ip is 192.168.1.1
> > Another nic is for external and uses public address.
>
> > Can I setup public ip address port forwarding to different computers and How?
>
> > i.e.
> > Port 80 for ip 192.168.1.101
> > Port 21 for ip 192.168.1.102...
>
> > Thanks- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
I agree on all accounts...