I have a Linux host with samba and cups, and a printer. I can print to the printer, from a Windows system (xp, 98). It would be very nice if I could print n-up from the windows system, but have not been able to figure out how to. My guess is that it would be best to establish a queue for 2-up...
If one has a dynamic IP, and sends SMTP out, many mailhosts will reject mail from dynamic IPs, or when the reverse dns lookup fails. Hence the reason for wanting to make it work with a static IP.
Some ISPs also frequently change their dynamic leases. For example sattelite based broadband...
Thanks. I read a Wiki on proxy servers, and that's close to what I had in mind. I'll dig further.
My post wasn't specifically about hacker detection, but was relevant to security.
I wonder if there is an implemenation of a www gateway, where a user establishes a session with a "server", which in turn performs the net access, and then routes the traffic back to the client?
Implementation of this would be a way to gate and log traffic.
It's more of a hypothetical...
Well, I just did a serach, and this post didn't come up, so I posted a variant of this question.
I don't have experience with your router, but have not found a way to do this with several routers. Have you solved the problem, yet?
Thanks.
I'm wondering if anyone has ever done port forwarding through a VPN? For example, to have port 80 traffic go through a VPN to a remote server.
A few pointers would be helpful. Thanks.
I have a RoadRunner (residential) cable modem as my WAN connection. This connects to a Linux box (2.4.33 kernel), which links on a separate ethernet card to a switch for the house. Hanging off that switch is several computers, and two gizmos for VOIP, VOIP1 and VOIP2.
My rr service is about...
I'd like to take a sliver of bandwidth at work, where I have static IPs, and do the following:
-have one of the static IPs route to my remote mailhost
-do the connection to the remote mailhost via a VPN (IPsec pref.)
-make this connection bidirectional, so that outbound mail comes from the...
I would like to do a raw read of a device, such as a DVD or a harddrive. How can I do this in Windows (xp)?
The equivalent in Linux would be something like a
read on /dev/hda or /dev/dvd.
The reason I want to do this is to do a complete volume compare, bypassing the file system.
Just upgraded our server to Slackware 11.0, using Sendmail. One annoying problem is that mail created on the server has a from of host.sld.tld, rather than the preferred sld.tld.
Anyone know where I go to change this?
Thanks.
I had a similar thought in mind. I posted a question on directing a vpn to a static ip, and then that static ip, port 25, at another site, would be used for smtp. I just can't figure out how to implement it.
I want my mailserver at home to use one of the static IPs at work, to pass SMTP mail.
So I would tunnel from home to work, and then to a the public static IP, which would be used exclusively for my home based mailserver.
I'm trying to figure out how to configure a VPN which would allow me to:
-connect from my home DHCP (port 25 blocked) residential service to my work (Watchguard x500 box)
-go out from my work system, on a static IP
-pass port 25 SMTP traffic (allows me to run a mailserver at home)
I would have...
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