On Mon, Dec 12, 2011 at 11:41 AM, Cisco certification <
ccielab_at_groupstudy.com> wrote:
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> --- Original Message Follows ---
>
> Date: Mon, 12 Dec 2011 11:41:13 -0800
> Subject: New Internet Connection
> From: Azhar Ali <aali.ccie_at_gmail.com>
> To: ccielab_at_groupstudy.com
>
> I setup a new Internet Connection and got Cisco ASA firewall setup for
> basic operation. Basically just letting all traffic out and nothing back
> in. I then set the default route on the Core switch in HQ to use the new
> internet connection.
>
> Internet worked great, but the problem is that with the default route set
> to other than our old AIS internet a lot of our services such as email
> broke.
>
> All the exchange servers and spam filter sit in our HQ. I thought that as
> long as incoming connections could route in through AIS as they always have
> things should continue to work fine but it seems this is not the case.
>
> In the long run I plan on setting up all our new public IP addresses on an
> external DNS server and adding NAT and firewall rules to the new firewall
> so connections to HQ servers can happen straight through the HQ
> firewall/New Internet Connection
>
> Is there anything I can do in the short term to allow users in HQ to take
> advantage of the new internet connection without breaking the connections
> for email and other resources?
>
> Can the old AIS internet provider create a DNS entry and Mail record for
> the traffic coming through our new Internet Provider. I don't have much
> experience with DNS and Mail record and need some advise before calling our
> Internet Provider to make appropriate changes
>
> Thanks
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Received on Thu Dec 15 2011 - 15:20:57 ART
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