Email Issue. Need Some badly needed Help.
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Yes. My setup could stand a update. Just haven't done it.
My DMZ rules are just the auto populated rules that pfblocker populates. I have a DNS rule and a port 443 rule to the Exchange box.
My DMZ setup is hanging off my pfsense setup.
Thanks
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Have you set up a DNS override for the Exchange?
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No. I haven't setup a DNS Override. Can you please explain further.
Thanks
Randy
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So your clients sitting on the dmz and they try and access your exchange via what FQDN - resolves to your public.. So you want to hit your public IP to get forwarded back in - this is a nat reflection did you allow for that?
Or if the dmz is accessing it via fqdn that resolve to the exchange servers rfc1918 address (host override).
"I have a DNS rule and a port 443 rule to the Exchange box"
What exactly is a dns rule to the exchange - dns normally does not run on exchange.. Your clients point to your exchange box for their dns?
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Yes, they will be accessing Exchange via the FQDN. Yes, I want the clients to hit the Public IP and get forwarded back in. How do I create a NAT reflection? Is it just firewall rules? I just want a simple way of making this work.
I have DNS running on my AD server and all clients use DNS on the router via DNS Resolver
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Why do you want nat reflection? Makes zero sense for client on your local network to go to your public just to be sent back in. Why not just setup a host override so when your clients ask the resolver on pfsense they get exchange.yourdomain.tld is 192.168.x.x etc.. And just allow for that access on the network interface they are on.
But if you have heart set on nat reflection, then you set that up on your port forward page that you forwarded the traffic into to your exchange.
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I don't want NAT Reflection. I thought that was needed from a routing perspective. I never worked with DNS Overrides, so I didn't realize I needed to use those.
I think you put me in a good place and I will work on this this evening.
Thanks for your help.
Randy
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No problem - let me know if you have any other questions.
override is simple just whatever fqdn your using to access your exchange with, just create the record so that when someone inside your network asks the resolver (unbound on pfsense) for that fqdn they get back the rfc1918 address vs the public one.
People outside pfsense would still resolve whatever public IP you have the fqdn pointing to and your forward would allow them in.
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Thanks Johnpoz & viragomann;
I am home and my email is working internally. I can"t believe that all it was was putting in a DNS host override. Very Happy. Now on to Exchange 2010 or 13 upgrade.
Thanks guys
Randy
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2010? That was end of mainstream support back in 2015
2013 non sp1 is end of support in few months..
You should be going to current 2016..