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Date:      Fri, 12 Oct 2001 15:39:13 -0400
From:      Simon Perkins <code@brained.org>
To:        Alson van der Meulen <alm@flutnet.org>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: How to protect binding to interface ?
Message-ID:  <20011012153913.H4157@brained.org>
In-Reply-To: <20011012212703.C21997@md2.mediadesign.nl>; from alm@flutnet.org on Fri, Oct 12, 2001 at 09:27:03PM %2B0200
References:  <20011010214156.B27378@brained.org> <20011012143031.B21997@md2.mediadesign.nl> <20011012143125.G4157@brained.org> <20011012212703.C21997@md2.mediadesign.nl>

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[-- Attachment #1 --]
On Fri, Oct 12, 2001 at 09:27:03PM +0200, Alson van der Meulen wrote:
> > > 
> > 
> > I think that is a workable solution. I think I stated my question wrongly.
> > What I need is *remote* users not to see public interfaces (bind to them).
> Do you mean 'users logged in thru ssh from a remote location'? or 'users
> on other remote computers making a tcp connection to me'? If it's the
> latter, it's not called binding to an interface, but just packet
> filtering/firewalling. So I assume you mean the former definition.
> 

Yes, I did mean the former. Maybe this is what I need to to
User ssh's to my public IP (say 111.111.111.111)
firewall running on public ip server forwards it to internal host (222.222.222.222)
internal host just has a private ip address (222...). So users even if
they run any server there, would be binding to non-public ip.


   Now I see, I can do this with 2 computers. But is it possible with
   just one computer (maybe with multiple network cards ?)

   Thanks

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