[AccessD] no-ip.com

Marcus, Scott (GEAE, Contractor) scott.marcus at ae.ge.com
Mon Jul 28 07:20:58 CDT 2003


John,

I had to give my X-Box a static IP on my network while making all the others
dynamic. What I did was give it an address one more than the number of
dynamic devices on the router (i.e.. 192.168.1.106). The reason for the 106
was I wanted to make sure it was out of range of the dynamic IP's which
begin at 1. I only have 5 other machines on the network. I also only allow
that range of IP's on my network (192.168.1.1 thru 192.168.1.6). It gives a
little more security since I'm wireless.

If this isn't the problem, sorry. I really shouldn't have commented without
reading all the other posts.

Scott 

-----Original Message-----
From: jcolby at colbyconsulting.com [mailto:jcolby at colbyconsulting.com]
Sent: Saturday, July 26, 2003 12:11 PM
To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving
Subject: RE: [AccessD] no-ip.com


Lembit,

Thanks for that.  I went through this about 6 months ago and got it all
working, such that it could all be seen from someone outside of my network.
Apparently after that I went back to dynamic IP addresses from my router.
Thus I now need to assign the server a fixed IP address and test that it can
see the internet and stuff with that fixed IP address.  I think I have
assigned the fixed IP and the other computers in the LAN can see the server,
but the server (or IE anyway) can't see the WWW so I am still uncertain
whether I have succeeded even in that much.  I have to get that done of
course in order to assign the holes in the firewall to the IP address so
that IIS can get through the firewall.

I never did figure out how to get a workstation on my LAN to be able to go
out to the WWW and back in via no-ip and see the site.  Thus the question
about placing one or the other in the DMZ (just for testing).  It's a PITA
to have to get an acquaintance to help with the testing.

John W. Colby
www.colbyconsulting.com

-----Original Message-----
From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com
[mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com]On Behalf Of Lembit Soobik
Sent: Saturday, July 26, 2003 11:12 AM
To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving
Subject: Re: [AccessD] no-ip.com


John,
I had a similar problem these days
I have set up one PC on the network as ftp server
I used Rhinosoft Serve-U ftp-server and its DNS4me to get a static address
for
my dynamic IP
while this software works ok and does what it should I had a problem to get
my
PC seen by the outsid e world
turned out ht my router (netgear RT311) has - in addition to the
brouwser-accessible setup - a filtering for some ports (FTP, WEB,...) which
can
only be changet by the telnet setup (plus a reset of the router)
so I got this working
the other part with setting fixed internal IP addresses I had teh same
experience as you. still waiting for a good idea to show up from somewhere
or
heaven :-)

Lembit Soobik

----- Original Message -----
From: <jcolby at colbyconsulting.com>
To: "AccessD" <AccessD at databaseadvisors.com>
Sent: Saturday, July 26, 2003 4:10 PM
Subject: [AccessD] no-ip.com


> Is anyone intimately familiar with no-ip.com (or the concept)?  I have set
> up my web server to serve up a site.  Some time ago I set up a no-ip
account
> to allow using my home office server to serve a web page with a dynamic
> address assigned by my cable company.  It no longer works.
>
> It appears that it no longer works because my router has assigned "holes"
> through the "firewall" to a specific internal address - 192.168.1.150
which
> was what the server was using.  However now the server is being assigned
an
> address by the router at boot and that number varies.  Thus I need to
"hard
> code" the IP address for the router back to 192.168.1.150 so that it
matches
> what the router software has assigned the "holes" to.
>
> I thought I knew how to do this, i.e. (For Win2K Pro) right click My
Network
> Places, select properties,  select Internet protocol, click properties,
> select "use the following IP address", and fill in the IP address, subnet
> mask, and default gateway (the router address).  I have done all of that.
I
> did NOT fill in the "Use the following DNS Server Addresses" however as I
> don't know what that is nor how to find it.
>
> Reboot the server, the router, and the server again and the server does
now
> report back the numbers I put in when I do an IPConfig from a dos box.
>
> Unfortunately now I can't see the internet from IE on the server.  The
> "windows update" software (automatic update) did run however so IT could
see
> the internet!
>
> Am I close?  Is it just a matter of a tweak somewhere?
>
> Next question.  I have not found a way to test the No-IP thing from a
> computer on the same LAN as the server.  Can I put the server in a DMZ and
> THEN be able to see the No-IP address from my workstation (inside the
> firewall)?  Can I leave the server inside the firewall and place the
> workstation in the DMZ and see the No-IP address?  Is it simply impossible
> to see it (test this stuff) by my self?
>
> Any help much appreciated.
>
> John W. Colby
> www.colbyconsulting.com
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> AccessD mailing list
> AccessD at databaseadvisors.com
> http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/accessd
> Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com


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