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ferdi2014-05-31 18:44:40
Computer networks
ferdi, 2014-05-31 18:44:40

How to bring the server to the Internet?

Good afternoon.

Situation: there is a static IP address, the company has 5 computers + 1 server (win server 2008). Everyone connects to it via local IP. There was a need to connect to the server remotely through terminal access. How to do it? Tried through dyndns.org but it doesn't connect. If you directly write the ip address, it also does not connect. Help, please, what settings should be made?

Prokin port, but it does not work.
server ip 192.168.1.200
2f6d5d8a520c4dedbdf8add9ada47ba3.png

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3 answer(s)
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Andrew, 2014-05-31
@ferdi

All the same, from your explanation, the IP address scheme is not entirely clear - the main question is whether the server has a full-fledged white IP address on the Internet.
I understood from the correspondence that it is not, and then you need a NAT tunnel on the router (other names: "port forwarding", "port mapping").
This is in the configuration of any modern router.
The tunnel settings specify the port on the router (on its external, white, static IP address) and which internal IP and internal port to forward it to, for example: "port 6000 -> forward to local 192.168.0.100 to port 3389".
Accordingly, after setting up the tunnel from the Internet, you need to connect to the white IP of the router on port 6000.

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Stepan, 2014-05-31
@L3n1n

As I understand it, the server is looking at the Internet and has a static (external) IP?
On the server, you need to allow connection to the service you want to connect to.
If you need to connect to a local machine on the network, you need to forward ports from LAN to the server.

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RStarun, 2014-05-31
@RStarun

Another question is which server.
if this is by chance SBS, then he himself knows how to configure almost everything.
In its control panel there are items about connecting to the Internet. When you run this item, the server itself tries to configure the router, and also tells you what needs to be done if the automatic configuration fails.
He also registers with Microsoft himself and issues a link by which you can access the server (remote desktops of machines on the network, its remote desktop, shared documents, etc.). All through the IE browser.

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