From: Martijn Lievaart <m@rtij.nl>
To: Robby Workman <netfilter@rlworkman.net>
Cc: "'netfilter@lists.netfilter.org'" <netfilter@lists.netfilter.org>,
Chris Willis <chris@castellan.net>
Subject: Re: Enabling internal connections to transparently connect via external IP address
Date: Fri, 01 Jun 2007 11:00:59 +0200 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <465FE04B.9060000@rtij.nl> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <465F63BA.3060101@rlworkman.net>
Robby Workman wrote:
> Chris Willis wrote:
>
>> Environment:
>> Windows XP laptop machine, part of domain acme.int, IP 192.168.1.150
>> Windows 2003 Server running Exchange 2003 (exchange.acme.int, 192.168.1.10)
>> External Domain: acme.com (T1 line, firewall external IP & MX record mail.acme.com 60.60.60.60)
>> Firewall: PC running Fedora Core 6, IPTables, using FWBuilder to create a ruleset, 2 NICs (eth0 192.168.1.1, eth1 60.60.60.60)
>>
>> Problem: when a laptop user (works in office and remotely) goes to https://mail.acme.com, it works fine from the outside, but not from the inside.
>>
>> Goal: when an internal (192.168.1.X) client goes to https://mail.acme.com, the firewall should accept the packets, route them to the exchange box, and then route return packets back to the client.
>>
>> This works just fine on a netscreen firewall I tested with at the client site (same IP addresses as linux box above).
>>
>
>
> There's the "dirty" way (IMHO):
> http://iptables-tutorial.frozentux.net/chunkyhtml/x4033.html
>
> There's the cleaner way (IMHO):
> Have your DNS server setup to serve internal clients the internal
> address of mail.acme.com.
>
Or even cleaner, set up the Exchange server in a DMZ (you still have to
do the split-dns unless you get multiple IPAs).
M4
prev parent reply other threads:[~2007-06-01 9:00 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 3+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2007-05-31 20:17 Enabling internal connections to transparently connect via external IP address Chris Willis
2007-06-01 0:09 ` Robby Workman
2007-06-01 9:00 ` Martijn Lievaart [this message]
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