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Hébergeur: |
I have a local DSL provider whom I use for my e-mail & web surfing. I
currently have a "dynamic" IP address from my ISP. I am using a LinkSys WRT54G Router for my wi-fi laptop. I also want to setup a Win 2003 server w/IIS 6.0 I would like host a couple of web sites on this server. Is there a "how-to" guide anywhere that can explain how to setup the DNS and "fqdn" for my web sites, using the above scenario ??? Any would be greatly appreciated. TIA, Harold. |
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Hébergeur: |
<hjohn5120@lycos.com> wrote in message
news:1142732897.798271.24860@e56g2000cwe.googlegro ups.com... >I have a local DSL provider whom I use for my e-mail & web surfing. I > currently have a "dynamic" IP address from my ISP. This is your main issue since you will have to figure out a way that this DYNAMIC IP can be (securely) registered to point to your web server, and available to the public Internet users. The second issue is mapping your external address (on port 80) for web access to your server behind your DSL router. Presuming your LinkSys is also the WAN-Internet router... (or could put a Windows machine in that position but the level of knowledge to get the security right is then VERY high.) > I am using a LinkSys WRT54G Router for my wi-fi laptop. Most of the later (e.g., G) routers support both mapping external connections (on some port) to internal machines (IP-Port); they call this feature by various names, service definition, service mapping, port mapping. You get the idea since we are defining or mapping an external port or service connection to an actual internal IP and port combination. > I also want to setup a Win > 2003 server w/IIS 6.0 I would like host a couple of web sites on this > server. Is there a "how-to" guide anywhere that can explain how to > setup the DNS and "fqdn" for my web sites, using the above scenario ??? So you need to do the mapping AND you need to find a DYNAMIC DNS service. For Dynamic DNS I use the free (they sell stuff but the basic features you need are available free) DynDNS.com http://www.dyndns.com/ > Any would be greatly appreciated. TIA, Harold. Basically you do this: 1) Setup a DynDNS account and (various) dynamic name(s) 2) Find out how your ROUTER (WAN DSL) supports dynamic registration (that's a LinkSys question but it probably does.) Configure it to update the DynDNS account above. Another value of DynDNS is that it is one of the most popular services and likely to be support semi-automatically by your router. 3) Set a CNAME record for your Web server to resolve the NAME to the DynDNS name. So you pick some DynDNS name like: YourChoiceHJohn.DynDNS.org You set a CNAME (in your own zone, e.g., yourcompany.com) like WWW to point to that: www -->> YourChoiceHJohn.DynDNS.org Your router updates it's dynamic address to DynDNS every time the address changes (reboot, lease expiration, etc.) And when people lookup www.yourcompany.com it is mapped to your dynamic record which has the correct address. If you have more than one of these you just keep mapping more CNAME records to the same or different DynDNS.com records. -- Herb Martin, MCSE, MVP Accelerated MCSE http://www.LearnQuick.Com [phone number on web site] |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Hébergeur: |
Dear Herb,
Your reply and ful assistance is just what I needed. I will start setting up an account and config my linksys router. May I ask for your "excellent" assistance again .... if I get stuck ??? Again, many thanks, Harold |
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