Home All Groups Group Topic Archive Search About
Author
2 Dec 2006 10:03 AM
janko.klemensek
Hello

I have two computers on "switch". I want one computer to be router to
the other. Both computers have only one NIC (and winXP SP2). I know it
is posible with Sygate SHN One NIC. I am wondering if it is posible
with just windows settings, like ICS?

Suggestion:
Computer who is a router have two IP setings, one static public IP
(from ISP) and one static private IP to communicate with other
computer. I can set these in Advanced Internet Protocol Properties. Now
how to bridge these two (public and private) networks?

Author
2 Dec 2006 10:44 AM
Dariusz Hoszowski
Hi,
As i know ICS can share connection, but you have to have 2 NIC's (one
receives automaticly IP 192.168.0.1, DHCP, etc. and second is for your
ISP)...
It is not a good idea (from security point of view) to make Internet card a
local card also (for example you can't block spoofed traffic, etc.).

Regards,
Dariusz Hoszowski


Uzytkownik <janko.klemen***@gmail.com> napisal w wiadomosci
Show quoteHide quote
news:1165053782.034435.209630@n67g2000cwd.googlegroups.com...
> Hello
>
> I have two computers on "switch". I want one computer to be router to
> the other. Both computers have only one NIC (and winXP SP2). I know it
> is posible with Sygate SHN One NIC. I am wondering if it is posible
> with just windows settings, like ICS?
>
> Suggestion:
> Computer who is a router have two IP setings, one static public IP
> (from ISP) and one static private IP to communicate with other
> computer. I can set these in Advanced Internet Protocol Properties. Now
> how to bridge these two (public and private) networks?
>
Author
2 Dec 2006 11:03 AM
janko.klemensek
I am aware of security risk.
I am wondering if it is posible?
What about IPEnableRouter value in registry?


Dariusz Hoszowski wrote:
Show quoteHide quote
> Hi,
> As i know ICS can share connection, but you have to have 2 NIC's (one
> receives automaticly IP 192.168.0.1, DHCP, etc. and second is for your
> ISP)...
> It is not a good idea (from security point of view) to make Internet card a
> local card also (for example you can't block spoofed traffic, etc.).
>
> Regards,
> Dariusz Hoszowski
Author
2 Dec 2006 11:45 AM
Dariusz Hoszowski
Hi,
As Microsoft said:
"Alternate IP Configuration. Allows a single interface to make use of more
than one IP address as long as only one is used at a time."
so even if you turn the registry value on - it will not work because the
interface will use only one IP address (not two).

Regrads,
Dariusz Hoszowski

Uzytkownik <janko.klemen***@gmail.com> napisal w wiadomosci
Show quoteHide quote
news:1165057422.643600.247670@73g2000cwn.googlegroups.com...
>I am aware of security risk.
> I am wondering if it is posible?
> What about IPEnableRouter value in registry?
>
>
> Dariusz Hoszowski wrote:
>> Hi,
>> As i know ICS can share connection, but you have to have 2 NIC's (one
>> receives automaticly IP 192.168.0.1, DHCP, etc. and second is for your
>> ISP)...
>> It is not a good idea (from security point of view) to make Internet card
>> a
>> local card also (for example you can't block spoofed traffic, etc.).
>>
>> Regards,
>> Dariusz Hoszowski
>
Author
2 Dec 2006 1:09 PM
janko.klemensek
Thanks for your quick replay.

Dariusz Hoszowski wrote:
Show quoteHide quote
> Hi,
> As Microsoft said:
> "Alternate IP Configuration. Allows a single interface to make use of more
> than one IP address as long as only one is used at a time."
> so even if you turn the registry value on - it will not work because the
> interface will use only one IP address (not two).
>
> Regrads,
> Dariusz Hoszowski
Author
2 Dec 2006 1:30 PM
Steve Winograd [MVP]
In article <1165053782.034435.209***@n67g2000cwd.googlegroups.com>,
janko.klemen***@gmail.com wrote:
>Hello
>
>I have two computers on "switch". I want one computer to be router to
>the other. Both computers have only one NIC (and winXP SP2). I know it
>is posible with Sygate SHN One NIC. I am wondering if it is posible
>with just windows settings, like ICS?
>
>Suggestion:
>Computer who is a router have two IP setings, one static public IP
>(from ISP) and one static private IP to communicate with other
>computer. I can set these in Advanced Internet Protocol Properties. Now
>how to bridge these two (public and private) networks?

No, it's not possible.  ICS requires separate network connections for
the Internet and the home network.  There's no way to have two
connections for one NIC, even with multiple IP addresses.
--
Best Wishes,
Steve Winograd, MS-MVP (Windows Networking)

Please post any reply as a follow-up message in the news group
for everyone to see.  I'm sorry, but I don't answer questions
addressed directly to me in E-mail or news groups.

Microsoft Most Valuable Professional Program
http://mvp.support.microsoft.com