B
BobK
I at least want people on the 10.10.1.0/24 network to be able to connect to
10.10.99.2.
Server "A" is a new Win2K server w/ RRAS configured as a LAN Router. NIC #1
is 10.10.1.1/24 with no default gateway. NIC #2 is 10.10.99.5/24 with
10.10.99.3.
Server "B" is a Windows 2003 server, also with RRAS configured as a LAN
Router, but unlike Server A, this on also has IGMP and NAT Basic Firewall
(under "IP Routing" in RRAS). NIC #1 is 10.10.2.1/24 with no default
gateway. NIC #2 is 10.10.99.2/24 with 10.10.99.3 as the default gateway.
People on the 10.10.2.0/24 network can ping 10.10.99.5 and 10.10.99.3
(routing through Server B). But they can't ping anything on the 10.10.1.0
subnet.
People on the 10.10.1.0/24 network can NOT ping 10.10.99.2, but they CAN
ping 10.10.99.3. And of coarse they can't ping anything on the 10.10.2.0
subnet.
I want everybody to be able to ping everybody. But I'd be happy today if
only I could get people on the 10.10.1.0 network to ping 10.10.99.2.
Please help to get me out of this hell. Let me know if you need more info.
10.10.99.2.
Server "A" is a new Win2K server w/ RRAS configured as a LAN Router. NIC #1
is 10.10.1.1/24 with no default gateway. NIC #2 is 10.10.99.5/24 with
10.10.99.3.
Server "B" is a Windows 2003 server, also with RRAS configured as a LAN
Router, but unlike Server A, this on also has IGMP and NAT Basic Firewall
(under "IP Routing" in RRAS). NIC #1 is 10.10.2.1/24 with no default
gateway. NIC #2 is 10.10.99.2/24 with 10.10.99.3 as the default gateway.
People on the 10.10.2.0/24 network can ping 10.10.99.5 and 10.10.99.3
(routing through Server B). But they can't ping anything on the 10.10.1.0
subnet.
People on the 10.10.1.0/24 network can NOT ping 10.10.99.2, but they CAN
ping 10.10.99.3. And of coarse they can't ping anything on the 10.10.2.0
subnet.
I want everybody to be able to ping everybody. But I'd be happy today if
only I could get people on the 10.10.1.0 network to ping 10.10.99.2.
Please help to get me out of this hell. Let me know if you need more info.