Re: Front end server
- From: "Chris H" <chrisflyer@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 06 Apr 2006 13:16:16 GMT
ahh ok, that makes sense, so to finish its looks like this;
External ISA
192.168.1.110
255.255.255.0
192.168.1.1
isp dns
Internal ISA
192.168.100.1
255.255.255.0
No Gateway
192.168.100.100
Internal DC1
192.168.100.100
255.255.255.0
192.168.100.1
192.168.100.100
However, you say that the External Nic has nothing, but befor you said to
set my External NIC as my ISP DNS's, I think you mean that the External nic
has ISP DNS's, thats what makes sense in my head.
Now thats all sorted, just got to work out how to use the damn thing, still
cant get web access, even though ive made a http firewall rule for internal
& local host to allow, but never mind, thanks for all the help
Chris
"ZVR" <no_spam_ever@xxxxxx> wrote in message
news:44350756$0$31852$9a6e19ea@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Internal ISA Nic
192.168.100.1
255.255.255.0
no Gateway
What should the DNS address's be? nothing, ISP, or CH-DC1 Nic
If you want to join ISA to the domain maintained by CH-DC1, it *has* to be
CH-DC1. Ideally ISA's internal NIC has CH-DC1 for DNS, the external NIC
has nothing, and you create a rule in ISA allowing access to DNS traffic
from CH-DC1.
Virgil
.
- References:
- Front end server
- From: Chris H
- Re: Front end server
- From: ZVR
- Re: Front end server
- From: Chris H
- Re: Front end server
- From: ZVR
- Front end server
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