Date: Mon, 17 Oct 2005 13:13:35 -0500 From: "Zane C. B." <zanecb@midwest-connections.com> To: G Bryant <gbryant@roamingsolutions.net> Cc: FreeBSD <freebsd-net@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: How would I go about routing something like this? Message-ID: <20051017131335.0000239b@mwc-acomputer> In-Reply-To: <4350BC26.6030406@roamingsolutions.net> References: <20051014142223.000048c8@mwc-acomputer> <4350BC26.6030406@roamingsolutions.net>
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Yeah, currently got it setup like that. What I want to do is to route all traffic out through the secondary machine, for packets originating from a specific IP#. So the main router routes packets coming in from some IP#s to the secondary one for filtering. This possible or not workable? Been reading and I am not seeing any thing about how this would be achieved. On Sat, 15 Oct 2005 10:21:58 +0200 G Bryant <gbryant@roamingsolutions.net> wrote: > You can either use ipfw fwd command (has to be enabled in the kernel), > where you forward all lan incoming packets with destination port 80, to > the ip and port that the other proxy is listening on, > or (more complicated) you can use squid proxy on your local machine, use > ipfw to fwd all lan incoming packets with destination port 80 to the > port that squid is listening on (normally 3128), and then you have to > specify in the squid config that it must use a different proxy as it's > "parent" proxy. You could then either enable caching on this machine, > or configure it as a "dummy" proxy. > You will probably have to read all the man pages anyway, so use this as > a starting point.
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