Marcus, Scott (GEAE, Contractor)
scott.marcus at ae.ge.com
Mon Jul 28 09:17:11 CDT 2003
John, What are you using to sync the time on your server? Scott -----Original Message----- From: jcolby at colbyconsulting.com [mailto:jcolby at colbyconsulting.com] Sent: Monday, July 28, 2003 10:11 AM To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving Subject: RE: [AccessD] no-ip.com Scott, Thanks for the response. I did have to give the IIS Server a fixed 192.168 IP, and with a few other things got it all working again. Anyone interested can go to http://colbyconsulting.no-ip.com to see the results. This is just a simple web page, but the time is created using a call to VB.Net. Oooooohhh! Ok, not a big deal, it just demonstrates that IIS is correctly talking to the .net framework and passing the .net stuff off to ASP.Net to be handled. For anyone not yet looking at .net, what this gives me is all of the capabilities of the .net framework which include an enormously powerful set of classes, as well as the programming languages - vb.net, c#.net etc. John W. Colby www.colbyconsulting.com -----Original Message----- From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com [mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com]On Behalf Of Marcus, Scott (GEAE, Contractor) Sent: Monday, July 28, 2003 8:21 AM To: 'Access Developers discussion and problem solving' Subject: RE: [AccessD] no-ip.com 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. 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