At our small business we have a Comcast Business Gateway. It's an SMC. Behind the gateway, we have a small Cisco Business Router (RVS4000). The IPs are setup like this:
Internet----> 50.130.xx.xx [ SMC Gateway ] 10.1.10.1 --------> 10.1.10.10 [ Cisco Router ] ---->network
50.130.xx.xx is static.
We have an OSX Server with file sharing (AFP protocol) behind the Router that we need remote employees to be able to access. So I setup this so far:
AFP uses port 548. So when someone access our static ip address in OSX Finder (Go > Connect to Server), the Gateway should forward the request to 10.1.10.10, the Cisco Router.
Next on the Cisco Router:
So now the Cisco router should be forwarding the request to the OSX Server (192.168.1.34 on the local network).
However, when attempting to access via AFP remotely, it just times out. Do I have this setup correctly? Am I doing anything wrong?
Alternatively, is it possible to setup the Gateway so that all requests basically go right through and ignore the Gateway's firewall and just use the Cisco Router?
Internet----> 50.130.xx.xx [ SMC Gateway ] 10.1.10.1 --------> 10.1.10.10 [ Cisco Router ] ---->network
50.130.xx.xx is static.
We have an OSX Server with file sharing (AFP protocol) behind the Router that we need remote employees to be able to access. So I setup this so far:
AFP uses port 548. So when someone access our static ip address in OSX Finder (Go > Connect to Server), the Gateway should forward the request to 10.1.10.10, the Cisco Router.
Next on the Cisco Router:
So now the Cisco router should be forwarding the request to the OSX Server (192.168.1.34 on the local network).
However, when attempting to access via AFP remotely, it just times out. Do I have this setup correctly? Am I doing anything wrong?
Alternatively, is it possible to setup the Gateway so that all requests basically go right through and ignore the Gateway's firewall and just use the Cisco Router?