I just signed up for Fusion and got the Comtrend 5631. I was thinking of exposing a development server with one of the static ip's and having my main internet connection on another.
Right now I have a comcast (dumping them once I get all this working) dynamic ip that is nat'd via an airport express. My private network is 10.0.1.*. I'd still like to keep my 10 network with the comtrend and continue using my airport for dhcp and firewall. I've been playing around with the comtrend and searched around quite a bit and I haven't really seen anyone trying for this configuration.
I've managed to setup bridging on the comtrend and have been testing out the static ip with my dev box. However, this requires me to setup all the firewalling on the dev box and I'd rather push all that stuff out to the router(s) level. But, I know at least the bridge part is working.
So my question is how to connect the virtual interfaces to a port map and have it all magically work. Ideally I would like something like [public ip] <--> [airport] <--> [private internal ip] - this is basically what I have now. And to top it off, on the dev box (it's a mac mini) I have vmware hosting a centos vm. The vm is on my same private network and ultimately, the vm ip is what I'd like to expose on port 80.
I'll keep looking and digging, but wanted to know if anyone else had tried something similar and gotten it to work.
Thanks,
- jason
Right now I have a comcast (dumping them once I get all this working) dynamic ip that is nat'd via an airport express. My private network is 10.0.1.*. I'd still like to keep my 10 network with the comtrend and continue using my airport for dhcp and firewall. I've been playing around with the comtrend and searched around quite a bit and I haven't really seen anyone trying for this configuration.
I've managed to setup bridging on the comtrend and have been testing out the static ip with my dev box. However, this requires me to setup all the firewalling on the dev box and I'd rather push all that stuff out to the router(s) level. But, I know at least the bridge part is working.
So my question is how to connect the virtual interfaces to a port map and have it all magically work. Ideally I would like something like [public ip] <--> [airport] <--> [private internal ip] - this is basically what I have now. And to top it off, on the dev box (it's a mac mini) I have vmware hosting a centos vm. The vm is on my same private network and ultimately, the vm ip is what I'd like to expose on port 80.
I'll keep looking and digging, but wanted to know if anyone else had tried something similar and gotten it to work.
Thanks,
- jason