Created on 01-07-2005 01:57 PM
Created on 01-10-2005 05:23 AM
Why would you want to perform a trace to your own webservers anyway?First, you need to understand the reasoning for moving from Static NAT to Port Forwarding. We have 3 separate IIS servers behind our firewall with the exact same configuration, sites, etc. (except IP addresses). This way, we can move any of our public sites to a different server by simply changing the forwarding in the firewall. This is as opposed to using clustering for true failover capability - they are still not comfortable with having us do that. Hence, our situation. That said, we have one of our public IP addresses that is used for FTP.mydomain.com and for WWW.mydomain.com. The powers that be wanted to be able to move FTP independently of WWW. Therefore, with a Static NAT, I always have to tie the WWW and FTP together and move them to another server together. Port Forwarding would allow me to do this since port 21 and port 80 could be independently assigned to separate LAN servers. This past week, we tried going to Port Forwarding instead of Static NAT. The first indication something was wrong was our users could not hit one of our websites. Before you mention internal DNS, this is a site hosted for a customer where they point their DNS entry to our IP address. I tried to do an NSLOOKUP of the domain name and it resolved the proper external IP address. When I did a trace, the last good hop was the Internal IP of the Fortigate. The next one said Destination Host Unreachable. Also, some external clients were not able to reach some of our websites. I verified this fact by trying it from my home and I was unable to reach these sites unless we went back to Static NAT. That is the reason I would try to trace to my own web sites.
Created on 01-10-2005 06:38 AM
Created on 01-10-2005 06:53 AM
Created on 01-10-2005 07:05 AM
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