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| subject: | Re: registering SQL Server not in domain |
From: "Robert Comer"
Yep.
It would work the same but you've got to set up the router to use the port
ip address NAT. It's called port forwarding and it's part of what NAT
does.
I use port forwarding on all of my servers at work -- I don't expose any
server directly to the net, just specific ports via forwarding.
--
Bob Comer
"Ellen K." wrote in message
news:vvm5l1pc7na8lse4agggp2b5aa591kb64j{at}4ax.com...
> So when I send a message to SQL Server the thing that creates the
> message tells it to go to 1433, and messages for the PBX have their own
> port etc? What if the SQL Server were set up to use some other port
> instead of 1433?
>
> On Sun, 16 Oct 2005 16:36:59 -0400, "Robert Comer"
> wrote in message :
>
>>>But I am curious how the eOn router
>>> knows which of the devices behind it incoming messages are for.
>>
>>By port...
>
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