Re: [Samba] Multiple IP addresses
- Date: Tue, 8 Apr 2008 14:55:24 -0500
- From: "Robert Pollard" <rpollard@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: Re: [Samba] Multiple IP addresses
Hey Greg,
I don't have a firewall in between the server and the Internet. I was
trying to do some benchmarks on file transfers and then I would disconnect
it after getting the benchmarks.
I believe I know why I couldn't reach the Samba shares though -- the Sun
X4200 M2 has been having configuration problems with the 4 ethernet ports.
I can get the nge0 (the first port) working fine which has our production
system on it. But, I can't get any other port to come up along with the
primary port.
Suggestion #2 seems like a possibility. So, the class A address I'm using
will need to be entered into the Hosts allow field?
For production, there will be a firewall and VPN access only. I have been
looking for a stable VPN router/client that works solid on all recent
Windows releases and haven't found one yet. I started using PPTP and it
seems to be the most stable of all, believe it or not.
Thanks for the help!
----- Original Message -----
From: "Greg J. Zartman, P.E." <greg@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Robert Pollard" <rpollard@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: <samba@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, April 03, 2008 5:32 PM
Subject: Re: [Samba] Multiple IP addresses
I have been trying to connect to Samba over the Internet as I have static
IP that is publicly available for connection. I can use this IP to
connect to our Intranet web site but Samba doesn't work correctly when
trying to connect to it from outside. Our internal network addresses
work fine. Even a VPN connection, which gets our internal address scheme
works. But, when trying to use the publicly available IP address to
connect to Samba it can't find it.
There are likely a couple things preventing access:
1. Did you open the Samba ports on your firewall? Most firewalls have
these ports closed by default.
2. Hosts allow/Hosts deny parameter. Is this set so that Samba will
actually respond to the subnet that you are trying to access Samba from?
IMO, opening Samba up to the internet is an inherently bad thing to do and
something that very rarely really needs to be done. Instead, you should
look at an ssh tunnel or an IPSec VPN.
I use IPsec VPN routers to connect my two offices, which are both on
different subnets and in different Citys. The routers I used are fairly
inexpensive, but work wonderfully and are very easy to setup:
http://www.netgear.com/Products/VPNandSSL/WiredVPNFirewallRouters/FVS114.aspx
Greg
---
Greg J. Zartman, P.E.
President, Principal Engineer
LEI Engineering & Surveying
2468 West 11th Avenue
Eugene, Oregon 97402
Voice 541-683-8383 Fax 541-683-8144
www.leiinc.com
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