Claude Jones wrote:
The problem:
Company has switched over to FIOS and I have to move behind a
router
I will be behind a 10.0.0.1 LAN on a Cisco Router
I will be configured with an outside address, let's say
70.xxx.xxx.120 for argument's sake
There's the problem, you don't want an "outside address" on your
machine, because it's not outside. The outside address should be on the
outward side of the router, and should be NATed to your private address.
Traffic to that address from the outside will be routed to my box
inside the network by the Cisco
I need to tell the box/outside NIC that its gateway is 10.0.0.1
even though it's not an address within the IP/subnet that the
NIC is configured for
It's not that you can't do this, it's that you probably don't want to do
this. If someone wants to put outside addresses on inside machines for
political reasons, like "we need outside connectivity" or such, that's
the kind of reasoning used by people who took a semester each of FORTRAN
and COBOL as part of their MBA. The router should be doing NAT in both
directions to make this work in a sane way, and you have far better
security by having private IP inside the firewall, so that there is no
way packets between trusted machines could leak.
There are reasons for this
Before you say it can't be done, google my subject line and
you'll find this nice howto for Debian
http://siddhesh.in/foreign-gateway.php
I'm wondering if I need to pursue the route in that howto, or
whether I can configure this with the system-config-network GUI
in Fedora -- I see there's a 'Route' tab in there, but I've
never used it
--
Bill Davidsen <davidsen@xxxxxxx>
"We have more to fear from the bungling of the incompetent than from
the machinations of the wicked." - from Slashdot
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