From: Yonkerbonk (yonkerbonk@xxxxxxxxx)
Date: Thu Apr 26 2001 - 12:21:56 GMT-3
You can have static PAT translations. Use the
overloaded ip for the outside, but for specific ports
point it to different internal addresses. For example,
say you have two PCs on the inside running PCAnywhere
- 10.1.1.1 and 10.1.1.2. Make sure they run PCAnywhere
on different ports, I think 5631 and 5632 are default.
Let one PC run on those ports and the 2nd one run on
something else. Then when the router receives a packet
destined to outside ip address on port 5631, it knows
to send the packet to 10.1.1.1. When it receives it on
the other port, it will send it to 10.1.1.2.
The LAN Support team just has to remember to change
their PCAnywhere Hosts to different ports and also
reflect that on the PCAnywhere Remotes.
Michael Le, CCIE #6811
--- "Feliz, Edgar (CRTRES-NY)"
<Edgar.Feliz@concert.com> wrote:
> All,
>
> I had this question asked by a coworker who has a
> client that wants to run
> NAT. Due to the limited public IP addresses they are
> getting they have to
> run PAT, but as a requirement the LAN support team
> must be able to access
> host PCs using PC Anywhere should there be any
> problems with some
> applications that they are running. Has any body
> done anything like this?
>
> I thought having a telnet server to get to then from
> the telnet server
> accessing the hosts, but I am not that familiar with
> PC Anywhere. Any
> suggestions?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Edgar Feliz
> <<...OLE_Obj...>>
> CCIE # 6898
> Technical Consultant
>
>
>
>
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