Configuring multiple static ip adresses on only one NIC
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@steveits Hi steve,
You can think like we have 2 seperate buildings. 1 building has the data center , 2 building is office.
I am trying to access internet over 1 nic WAN port with several ip blocks.
My datacenter should have a different ip adress from my office ip.
Still not figured it out yet.
I keep trying several combinations..
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@antionline
Don't forget that you need a firewall rule on each vlan interface that directs the traffic to the gateway you want. The default Allow All to Any rules use the default gateway.Also bear in mind that I have never done this myself and might be talking out of my ass.Edit: Looks like ass it is. You can't add VIPs as gateways and most of what I said was nonsense. I'm curious enough to spin this up and try it. I'll let you know what I find.
Edit2: OK that wasn't too hard. Create your VIPs for each extra IP address you own. Go to Firewall - NAT - Outbound. Change your mode to Hybrid and then Save.
In my lab, I have the following:
WAN: 10.10.3.1/16
LAN: 192.168.2.1/24
OPT1: 192.168.3.1/24
VIPs: 10.10.3.2, 10.10.3.3, 10.10.3.4
Client1: 192.168.2.11
Client2: 192.168.3.11In my case, when I ping out from Client 1 or 2, the target shows the traffic coming from 10.10.3.1 which is my pfSense WAN address.
Add an outbound NAT rule:
The top rule shows that my Client2 at 192.168.3.11 is going to have its outbound traffic NAT'd to be coming from 10.10.3.3 instead of my WAN's address 10.10.3.1. Make sure you use a /32 mask if it's just one host you're NATing.
10:41:09.792137 IP 10.10.3.3 > 10.10.4.1: ICMP echo request, id 14027, seq 1, length 64 10:41:09.792175 IP 10.10.4.1 > 10.10.3.3: ICMP echo reply, id 14027, seq 1, length 64 10:41:10.794770 IP 10.10.3.3 > 10.10.4.1: ICMP echo request, id 14027, seq 2, length 64 10:41:10.794791 IP 10.10.4.1 > 10.10.3.3: ICMP echo reply, id 14027, seq 2, length 64 10:41:11.798430 IP 10.10.3.3 > 10.10.4.1: ICMP echo request, id 14027, seq 3, length 64 10:41:11.798460 IP 10.10.4.1 > 10.10.3.3: ICMP echo reply, id 14027, seq 3, length 64 10:41:12.802155 IP 10.10.3.3 > 10.10.4.1: ICMP echo request, id 14027, seq 4, length 64 10:41:12.802183 IP 10.10.4.1 > 10.10.3.3: ICMP echo reply, id 14027, seq 4, length 64
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@kom You know this job. this works very well. I can ping remotely via another public static ip immediately. seems very good solution. well done.
Ok Now I have another problem, one of my server is "windows server 2019". When I change the outbond NAT of my servers public Ip changes.(works ok). But on the other hand I have virtualization under this server which is centos 7 installed via hyperv.
servers client ip is 192.168.0.51
centos virtualization client ip is 192.168.0.41When I "dig +short myip.opendns.com @resolver1.opendns.com" to get the centos public ip it returns 10.10.10.1 which is "Auto created rule for ISAKMP - localhost to WAN" by pfsense-> pfblockerNG.
How can I make my centos virtualization's public static ip to real ip adress instead of pfsense auto ruleset controlled one(10.10.10.1)?
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@antionline External DNS for your domain is controlled by you I assume, so you can assign any IP address you want to myip.opendns.com. Nothing to do with pfSense.
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@kom
I add bypass script under DNS Resolver-> General Settings->Custom Options at the below of the page.Added this;
server:
access-control-view: 192.168.0.41/32 bypass
access-control-view: 192.168.0.0/16 dnsbl
do-tcp: yes
minimal-responses: yes
prefetch: yes
qname-minimisation: yes
rrset-roundrobin: yes
view:
name: "bypass"
view-first: yes
view:
name: "dnsbl"
view-first: yes
include: /var/unbound/pfb_dnsbl.*confThan I $ dig +short myip.opendns.com @resolver1.opendns.com -> returned and resolved normal public ip instead of PFBLOCKERNG VIP 10.10.10.1..
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@antionline Could you not have just added a host override to point your domain to your internal IP address?
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@kom I could find bypass methodby scripting, I don't know how to override method.
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@antionline Services - DNS Resolver. Scroll down to the bottom, Host Overrides.
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@kom I added my host override section. it is the same thing with my bypass script.
Can both bypasses PfblockerNG?
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@antionline Yes by adding some extra custom config to Resolver, but I don't remember the exact syntax. I had to do it once for my wife who was playing a mobile game that would slow down if it couldn't talk to its ad servers so I had to figure out a way around it. I no longer need it so I deleted the config months ago.
Edit: Found it in an older backup config.xml. The address to bypass pfB was 192.168.88.110.
server: access-control-view: 192.168.88.110/32 bypass access-control-view: 192.168.88.0/24 dnsbl view: name: "bypass" view-first: yes view: name: "dnsbl" view-first: yes server:include: /var/unbound/pfb_dnsbl.*conf