Port Ethernet
Thanks for visiting our site!
We hope you will find the Port Ethernet information that you seek.
We welcome you to browse our website and use the search feature if there is something in particular you are looking for.
We"ve included some information on each page for your reading.
Check Ebay for Port Ethernet products.
![]() |
|
TARGUS PA225U RETRACTABLE PHONE ETHERNET CABLE CORD PAUH210U 2.0 4 PORT USB HUB US $29.99
|
NetGear 8-port Gigabit Ethernet Switch NIB GS608 US $18.57
|
| Powered by phpBay Pro |
Another great place to shop for Port Ethernet products is Amazon. They have more than just books! Here are some more information for Port Ethernet: Copyright (c) 2008 Don R. Crawley Recently, a student at one of our seminars asked about port forwarding on a router. She wanted to allow PPTP clients to connect from the outside to a VPN server on the inside. In this article, I'll explain how to do it along with a quick look at using static NAT to forward packets to a web server. Port Forwarding on a Cisco Router Sometimes we have internal resources that need to be Internet-accessible such as Web servers, mail servers, or VPN servers. Generally, I recommend isolating those resources in a DMZ to protect your office LAN from the bad guys, but regardless of how you choose to design it, the process involves forwarding desired packets from the router's outside interface to an internal host. It's really a fairly simple process. Here's the configuration on a Cisco 2611 router: interface Ethernet0/1 ip address 12.1.2.3 255.255.255.0 ip nat outside ! interface Ethernet0/0 ip address 192.168.101.1 255.255.255.0 ip nat inside ! ip nat inside source list 101 interface Ethernet0/1 overload ip nat inside source static tcp 192.168.101.2 1723 interface Ethernet0/1 1723 ! access-list 101 permit ip any any In the above configuration, Ethernet 0/1 is connected to the public Internet with a static address of 12.1.2.3 and Ethernet 0/0 is connected to the inside network with a static address of 192.168.101.1. NAT outside is configured on E0/1 and NAT inside is configured on E0/0. Access-list 101 works in conjunction with the "ip nat inside source list 101 interface Ethernet0/1 overload" statement to permit all inside hosts to use E0/1 to connect to the Internet sharing whatever IP address is assigned to interface Ethernet E0/1. The "overload" statement implements PAT (Port Address Translation) which makes that possible. (PAT allows multiple internal hosts to share single address on an external interface by appending different port numbers to each connection.) The statement "ip nat inside source static tcp 192.168.101.2 1723 interface Ethernet0/1 1723" takes incoming port 1723 (PPTP) requests on Ethernet0/1 and forwards them to the VPN server located at 192.168.101.2. You could do something similar with a Web server by changing port 1723 to port 80 or port 443. Here's what that would look like: interface Ethernet0/1 ip address 12.1.2.3 255.255.255.0 ip nat outside ! interface Ethernet0/0 ip address 192.168.101.1 255.255.255.0 ip nat inside ! ip nat inside source list 101 interface Ethernet0/1 overload ip nat inside source static tcp 192.168.101.2 80 interface Ethernet0/1 80 ! access-list 101 permit ip any any In this example, the web server is located at 192.168.101.2 and instead of forwarding PPTP (port 1723) traffic, we're forwarding HTTP (port 80) traffic. Obviously, you can configure your Cisco router in a similar manner to forward nearly any type of traffic from an outside interface to an internal host. About the Author Don R. Crawley, CCNA-certified, is president and chief technologist at soundtraining.net, the Seattle training firm specializing in business skills and technical training programs for IT professionals. He works with IT pros to enhance their work, lives, and careers. Click here for a free subscription to soundbytes, the 60-second e-zine for IT pros with musings, rants, and how-to guides on things I.T. What is the difference between a dsl port and an ethernet port? On my modem, it has a dsl port and an ethernet port. What's the difference?
The DSL port is the WAN (wide area network / internet) facing port on the modem. It is the link over which your data traverses the network from the internal network to your external (ISP/Internet) network. The Ethernet port is the inside of the network and specifically designates that the transport method is Ethernet to the PCs on the inside. The TCP/IP packets are sent across the modem via these 2 ports. and are translated from Ethernet to DSL and back again. Cisco exec touts new core router's 100G Ethernet, energy efficiency Thanks for visiting!
Account limit of 2000 requests per hour exceeded.

Pptp and Http Port Forwarding With Static Nat on a Cisco Router
Cisco's new CRS-3 core router, which the company has boasted will "forever change the Internet," will come with 100Gbps Ethernet interfaces and 322Tbps multichassis interconnect capability at first customer shipment.

US $24.95
Be the first to comment.