I've some doubts about a VPN.
I've been given a Cisco VPN client to connect to the LAN of my society. I use this to connect to a local server. I don't understand how the VPN is working.
I'm at home now. In the VPN Client I see an IP. If I go to http://www.whatismyip.com/ I see another IP, which is the IP I've when I'm also without the VPN Client, while I expected to see the IP of the VPN Client. If I use $_SERVER['REMOTE_ADDR'] I see another (third!) IP, while I expected the IP I see in the VPN Client.
Can you clarify please?
I need this to know if I'm identifies always from the same IP from the local server.
If I'm not mistaken, this should be correct. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
By default you have 2 IP addresses.
Local IP: IP address used to identify yourself within your LAN.
Global IP: A public IP used to gain access to the internet. At home it will most likley be a public IP NATTED* by your ISP.
Because you're also using a VPN connection, you'll receive a third IP.
Local IP for VPN: IP address used to identify yourself on the other end of the VPN.
*NAT = Network Address Translation
Related
Hello Everyone!
I want to know that is there any way to access a photocopier machine which is connected to a computer through Ethernet wire and that computer is connected to my WiFi network?
P.S: What if I don't know the IP assigned to that Photocopier machine?
If the wireless network is part of the wired network you should have any problem reaching the photocopier.
If you don't know the IP address, you can reach it by host name if the DHCP and DNS are working properly. If you are on an Active Directory infrastructure and DHCP and DNS are integrated it should be transparent.
If you are on your home with a "home" router they usually do the hostname to IP resolve (DNS).
You can nslookup hostname in your machine to see if your dns is resolving the ip address. you can also ping hostname or ping ip address to test that you can reach the desired host. Some hosts block ping (ICMP) requests, please note that ping is ping does not respond is not a definitive solution.
Please note that in your home router you should use your router or default gateway to be the DNS also, and then add the google public DNS or your ISP.
Also when connecting the access point to an existing network you may have 2 DHCP servers providing IP addresses to hosts, you should disable DHCP on the Access Point and connect the AP to the network using the switch port and not the WAN port (the WAN port will try to do NAT and assign a different set of IP addresses).
I am facing a very strange problem. I have a task to establish a TCP connection to a server who has a trusted IP. And I have to run the code in a host with private IP address. The trusted IP is 10.10.10.15, which is also a private IP. And the question arises that the IP address of my host and the trusted IP is not on the same network. To be specific, my IP address is 10.0.35.1/24. Please let me know if there is any solution to this problem
Presumably these subnets, i.e. 10.10.10.0/24 (?) and 10.0.35.0/24, are part of your local network. You will need a Layer 3 device to perform inter-VLAN routing.
This will be a router with Layer 3 VLAN interfaces, in the Cisco world they would be SVIs, that would be acting as the default gateway of the subnets in your network. What happens is all traffic that needs to go between two hosts between different networks, has to go through their default gateway and it will be routed to the destination network/VLAN.
As long as the network devices between the two clients are able to route packets between these networks, the hosts will be able to reach each other. In your code, you simply need to specify that these packets need to go to the private IP address of the other host.
How do I get the internal IP address and port of the local machine in a cross-platform way? Not internal within the LAN, but the ISP, so that other users of the ISP can connect? Is connecting to a VPS with a public IP enough to get the external IP and port outside the ISP? How to get the ISP subnet mask to know when another internal IP is within the NAT?
edit: Probably don't need this. NAT punch through is enough. Am I right that router's don't have the same traversal rules as ISP's?
A NAT's public IP address is its external IP address. I don't understand what you mean by internal IP address. By internal address usually is meant a device's local address.
All the users of an ISP is in local LAN if the ISP has only one NAT under which all the private IP address is assigned. Some ISPs has nested NATs. In that case users under different NATs are in different network.
You can get your NAT's external IP:Port by sending a stun request to a stun server. From the server's reply you can get your NAT's external/public IP:Port. If the users of an ISP are not in local LAN but under different NATs then using their external IP:port they can communicate.
I have a machine in my private network with IP 192.168.1.10
I have a DNS name, "toto.mydns.com", a DNS client is running on the machine.
I configured the router for Port forwarding.
I can access the machine when i am outside my home, when using a pulic IP address it works but when i am at home and i get a dynamic IP address trough DHCP from my router, i cannot use toto.mydns.com anymore, i must use 192.168.1.10 to access.
I would like to know if i need to configure something on the router for that ?
Thank you !
toto.mydns.com will resolve to your external public IP
There will almost certainly be nothing routing that IP through to your router, and thus through NAT to your internal address.
The easiest way to resolve this (Pun very much intended) is to have a hosts file entry on your computers running inside your network so that they resolve the same DNS address to the internal address.
A much harder, but more fun, way would be to set up your own DNS server inside your network, have the DHCP dish it out as the primary DNS server for your network and put in an entry for your internal address :D
Have fun...
Toto.mydns.com is accessible from outside,this DNS is assigned on a machine with a static IP address(sorry not dynamic),so the IP of this machine is 192.168.1.10.
Whrn i am at home in my private network i need to enter 192.168.1.10 and toto.mydns.com does not work.Any help???
I have a network like that:
Internet <-> Modem <-> Router (broadcast wifi)
I'm using Windows. If I use command: ipconfig, I only know Modem's IP through info of Default Gateway.
So, how to know the Router's IP in this network.
Thanks.
If you want to know the external (from the Internet IP) you can browse to http://www.whatismyip.com/ and check it there.
Or
You can check it inside the router's configuration page. Unfortunately you can't simply know it by being a member of its network since this is a limitation of the NAT and the IP protocol.
If you wish to know the router's IP inside the internal network of the router .
when running ipconfig it should be the Default Gateway entry.
If you know your IP and you know your Netmask, then you can easy find out the subnet. The Router's IP is "always" the first avaible IP in the subnet. Thats the case for your private IP.
For the public IP you can try a service like this one.