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I want to do this.

I have a office firewall and all request from my system(10.140.22.11) will be routed through a NAT ip (200.142.24.224)

My system acts as a server. Any request made via internet should reach my system. How can I achieve this without going for a one to one static ip (i.e., with this common NAT ip of my firewall).

Is this possible ? Something like http;//200.142.24.224:7001/myApp?destIP=10.140.22.11 will help ? Will the firewall able to route it 10.140.22.11 using the request parameter (destIP)

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You can configure your NAT to forward external traffic for 200.142.24.224 to the 10.140.22.11 IP address on your LAN.

Then, if you use http//200.142.24.224:7001, the requests will be sent to 10.140.22.11. No need for myApp?destIP=10.140.22.11.

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  • +1 Thanks. Just one question. If all the requests are routed to 10.140.22.11, then if some other LAN machine (say 10.140.22.12) makes a request to external site (sat google.com), will 10.140.22.12 receive the response back or will that response too go back to 10.140.22.11
    – hop
    Mar 16, 2012 at 8:09
  • If you forward traffic with IP address 200.142.24.224, then other traffic from google.com will be forwarded to 10.140.22.12 (and not 10.140.22.11), because it will have a different ip address (not 200.142.24.224). Mar 16, 2012 at 10:53
  • No. In my case, 10.140.22.12 also will be mapped to the same NAT (200.142.24.224)
    – hop
    Mar 17, 2012 at 3:46
  • I meant the google will have a different IP and PORT mapping organized by the NAT. Mar 17, 2012 at 14:50
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    No, because you NAT performs translations with the IP address AND a port, which allows your 200.142.24.224 to be demultiplied 64K times, since the port value can take (nearly) any value between 0 and 65536. One IP address is used in 64K different ways. Although all outgoing communications will have 200.142.24.224 as the address, they will have a different port number. Mar 18, 2012 at 20:40

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