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Kettle on networks. Real IP behind a router is possible?
Hello. In matters of networks, let's say, I'm a bit of a teapot.
Actually the situation. There is an ESXi server connected to Provo and you can safely release virtual machines into its network with the right addresses. There, on this ESXi, a software router was raised, which distributes the Internet for everyone else. Now an idea has arisen - whether to replace the software router with something like ZyWALL USG 100. Naturally, it will stand in front of the ESXi server, and this raises the question - will it be possible to "push" certain virtual machines into the provider's network?
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there will be no such possibility with your level of knowledge). Alas.
Well, the network operator / 28 will allocate you. From it /30 will be docking (one on the gateway, one on the zukhel). Use the remaining /30 and /29 or 12 addresses as you wish on your servers. Or configure Zuhel as a switch (or bridge interface), then hang IP addresses as you wish
It's the same for me, only libvirt and not vmware. On the router in front of the server, one white IP is clogged. Inside the server and all the virtual machines on it receive IP from the router on the 192.168.1.1 subnet. And the router forwards ports to the necessary IP if they need to be accessed from outside. In the case of http, there is one main server with nginx, which proxies requests to different servers depending on the domain, and everything else is perfectly port forwarded.
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