Re: cups relaying remote broadcasts to a local subnet



On Thu, 2006-05-25 at 00:12 -0700, Thomas Taylor wrote:
On Wednesday 24 May 2006 09:35, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
snip <<<<<

This sounds like an application that could use a vpn (virtual private
network) over the internet. I haven't done this yet but have seen it
used at one company. You should be able to get information from the LPD
howto's on vpn or try googling for vpn.

HTH,
Tom

--
Tom Taylor
Linux user #263467
Federal Way, WA

Tom,

I have not set up a VPN yet either and had wondered the same thing.
Does this mean you believe that cups is not designed to perform in the
way I the network designed?

I thought cups was a little more robust than that!!!

Greg

To the best of my knowledge, cups has no way of communicating with a remote
network without using a vpn.

The 10.x.x.x series of IP addresses is set aside as private address space.
Probably millions of people use it in their internal networks. How is cups
to know which 10.x.x.x to communicate with over the internet? It can
communicate with any allowed private address including subnets within as long
as their is a direct physical or wireless connection. It can't go out over
the internet to find a private address space without a "tunnel" through the
internet (between two internet portals)

If this doesn't make sense, think about how you would control a "remote"
computer. You would need to send a control signal (hopefully encoded)
through your portal (your gateway to your ISP). That signal would have to
know how to find the portal for the remote you wanted to control. Then you
would have to connect to the internal network on the remote whose IP you can
supply to cups. What cups doesn't know is how to make a connection between
the portals. That's where the vpn (the tunnel) comes in. It makes a
connection between the internal network at one site and the internal network
at another remote site and carries the communication over it.

I suspect that if you ask about how to set up the vpn like this on the list,
you will get some better responses than I have given.

Tom

--
Tom Taylor
Linux user #263467
Federal Way, WA


Tom,

Thank you for taking the time to help me. I have wanted to set up a VPN
for awhile anyway, so now would he a good time to start the study
process.

In regards to your comments about cups, I understand what you are
saying, but my thought was that the documentation of cups seems to
support the feature of local broadcasting from a gateway. This
certainly works for one of my units (the one with only one ethernet
card), but as per your comments above it is placed on the same subnet as
the network and would be expected to work.

There is still a lot of magic in the way tcp/ip communication occurs for
me, but I was hopeful that cups would work in the same manner as httpd
behind the gateway which allows communication to a desktop behind the
firewall.

I will take your VPN challenge, but do some studying before I post
laughable questions.

Thanks again for your help!!!!

Greg

--
fedora-list mailing list
fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx
To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list



Relevant Pages

  • Re: cups relaying remote broadcasts to a local subnet (SOLVED)
    ... This sounds like an application that could use a vpn (virtual private ... network) over the internet. ... port 9100 it only has to be set up on the gateway machine. ...
    (Fedora)
  • Re: Using a Linksys router, should I also use Zonealarm?
    ... public internet to access corporate network. ... In the "old days" when people used to use Dial-In instead of VPN you ware ... protected by corporate Firewall -- since there was no public Internet ...
    (microsoft.public.security)
  • Re: Verizon rules the World? Or just the U.S.?
    ... Internet these days? ... network can now branch anywhere, and network data transfer is a piece ... Nearly all computer science departments and many private computer ... all these networks have gateways to the NSF backbone.) ...
    (rec.arts.mystery)
  • Re: Http access across a site 2 site VPN
    ... Troubleshooting Client Authentication on Access Rules in ISA Server 2004 ... Microsoft Internet Security & Acceleration Server: ... access rule that represents access to the vpn between the sites. ... corresponding network rules and access rules, and I went ahead and created ...
    (microsoft.public.isa)
  • Re: Remote Access and Setting up a VPN....need some expert advice....
    ... Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net ... Assuming you need to access the server shared folder only, it is better to use VPN. ... Since you have two NICs in the server, you can setup VPN follow this step by step how to. ... > internal network and has an address of 10.0.0.254. ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.server.sbs)