Date: Mon, 29 Jun 1998 10:49:30 -0500 From: Edwin Culp <eculp@webwizard.org.mx> To: Steven Ames <steve@news.cioe.com> Cc: yurtesen@ispro.net.tr, freebsd-isp@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: cisco Message-ID: <3597B78A.6DDF39DF@webwizard.org.mx> References: <199806291528.KAA06600@news.cioe.com>
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Steven Ames wrote: > > > > this is not exactly related to freebsd, sorry but... :) > > > well I want to restrict my users to use port 80 to surf on the net, > > > instead I want them to use my proxy server at port 8080. > > > because I have limited bandwidth, also I just want to close port 80 > > > for my users, the other people should be able on the outside should > > > be able to connect my proxy server. > > Instead of just blocking port 80 you can redirect it (transparently) > to your proxy server (if you convince your proxy server to run on > port 80) using policy based routing (ip policy route-map). > > -Steve I think it's even easier now, with Julian's patches and a proxy server like squid. But I'm not sure that is what he wants :-) provecho ed Julian Elischer has done some patches to FreeBSD-current to allow the same kind of redirection available in linux. Has somebody here tested them already ? For more info, refer to http://www.freebsd.org/~julian/ To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-isp" in the body of the message
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