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Correct way to setup VPN/VLAN for small business NETGEAR FVS336G


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0















My current employer has a horrendous setup for his internet, 2 Virgin Media cabled lines with routers that you'd use at home.



So we've had Fibre Optic installed and a Pool of 5 Public IP Addresses.
We have our gateway and All information from our ISP.
We've also got a Netgear FVS336G. It's hard to describe what I want to do so i've included a picture, but I want to MAP some of our Public IP's to a Lan Port on the Router, so that I can plug in different devices and they have a different public IP, but I don't want to fix the IP's on each machine, i want to do it on the Router. Is this Possible?



I know its not the correct place to ask this but I thought I'd give it a shot.
Below is basically what I want to do.



enter image description here










share|improve this question
















bumped to the homepage by Community 3 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
















  • 1) NAT, AKA Network Address Translation. 2) If they're springing for a fiber optic internet connection, you'd think they'd be willing to buy a real, managed router too. 3) Hire a consultant to get this designed properly and setup right. Cheaping out on the setup of the foundation of your entire IT infrastructure is just idiotic, regardless of how common it is.

    – HopelessN00b
    Mar 10 '15 at 11:24













  • Can you assign an ip address to a switch or router port such that whatever device is plugged into that port inherits that ip address? No you can't.

    – joeqwerty
    Mar 10 '15 at 14:00
















0















My current employer has a horrendous setup for his internet, 2 Virgin Media cabled lines with routers that you'd use at home.



So we've had Fibre Optic installed and a Pool of 5 Public IP Addresses.
We have our gateway and All information from our ISP.
We've also got a Netgear FVS336G. It's hard to describe what I want to do so i've included a picture, but I want to MAP some of our Public IP's to a Lan Port on the Router, so that I can plug in different devices and they have a different public IP, but I don't want to fix the IP's on each machine, i want to do it on the Router. Is this Possible?



I know its not the correct place to ask this but I thought I'd give it a shot.
Below is basically what I want to do.



enter image description here










share|improve this question
















bumped to the homepage by Community 3 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
















  • 1) NAT, AKA Network Address Translation. 2) If they're springing for a fiber optic internet connection, you'd think they'd be willing to buy a real, managed router too. 3) Hire a consultant to get this designed properly and setup right. Cheaping out on the setup of the foundation of your entire IT infrastructure is just idiotic, regardless of how common it is.

    – HopelessN00b
    Mar 10 '15 at 11:24













  • Can you assign an ip address to a switch or router port such that whatever device is plugged into that port inherits that ip address? No you can't.

    – joeqwerty
    Mar 10 '15 at 14:00














0












0








0








My current employer has a horrendous setup for his internet, 2 Virgin Media cabled lines with routers that you'd use at home.



So we've had Fibre Optic installed and a Pool of 5 Public IP Addresses.
We have our gateway and All information from our ISP.
We've also got a Netgear FVS336G. It's hard to describe what I want to do so i've included a picture, but I want to MAP some of our Public IP's to a Lan Port on the Router, so that I can plug in different devices and they have a different public IP, but I don't want to fix the IP's on each machine, i want to do it on the Router. Is this Possible?



I know its not the correct place to ask this but I thought I'd give it a shot.
Below is basically what I want to do.



enter image description here










share|improve this question
















My current employer has a horrendous setup for his internet, 2 Virgin Media cabled lines with routers that you'd use at home.



So we've had Fibre Optic installed and a Pool of 5 Public IP Addresses.
We have our gateway and All information from our ISP.
We've also got a Netgear FVS336G. It's hard to describe what I want to do so i've included a picture, but I want to MAP some of our Public IP's to a Lan Port on the Router, so that I can plug in different devices and they have a different public IP, but I don't want to fix the IP's on each machine, i want to do it on the Router. Is this Possible?



I know its not the correct place to ask this but I thought I'd give it a shot.
Below is basically what I want to do.



enter image description here







vpn ip vlan netgear






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 10 '15 at 11:21









HopelessN00b

48.5k24116194




48.5k24116194










asked Mar 10 '15 at 10:59









SeanSean

1




1





bumped to the homepage by Community 3 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.







bumped to the homepage by Community 3 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.















  • 1) NAT, AKA Network Address Translation. 2) If they're springing for a fiber optic internet connection, you'd think they'd be willing to buy a real, managed router too. 3) Hire a consultant to get this designed properly and setup right. Cheaping out on the setup of the foundation of your entire IT infrastructure is just idiotic, regardless of how common it is.

    – HopelessN00b
    Mar 10 '15 at 11:24













  • Can you assign an ip address to a switch or router port such that whatever device is plugged into that port inherits that ip address? No you can't.

    – joeqwerty
    Mar 10 '15 at 14:00



















  • 1) NAT, AKA Network Address Translation. 2) If they're springing for a fiber optic internet connection, you'd think they'd be willing to buy a real, managed router too. 3) Hire a consultant to get this designed properly and setup right. Cheaping out on the setup of the foundation of your entire IT infrastructure is just idiotic, regardless of how common it is.

    – HopelessN00b
    Mar 10 '15 at 11:24













  • Can you assign an ip address to a switch or router port such that whatever device is plugged into that port inherits that ip address? No you can't.

    – joeqwerty
    Mar 10 '15 at 14:00

















1) NAT, AKA Network Address Translation. 2) If they're springing for a fiber optic internet connection, you'd think they'd be willing to buy a real, managed router too. 3) Hire a consultant to get this designed properly and setup right. Cheaping out on the setup of the foundation of your entire IT infrastructure is just idiotic, regardless of how common it is.

– HopelessN00b
Mar 10 '15 at 11:24







1) NAT, AKA Network Address Translation. 2) If they're springing for a fiber optic internet connection, you'd think they'd be willing to buy a real, managed router too. 3) Hire a consultant to get this designed properly and setup right. Cheaping out on the setup of the foundation of your entire IT infrastructure is just idiotic, regardless of how common it is.

– HopelessN00b
Mar 10 '15 at 11:24















Can you assign an ip address to a switch or router port such that whatever device is plugged into that port inherits that ip address? No you can't.

– joeqwerty
Mar 10 '15 at 14:00





Can you assign an ip address to a switch or router port such that whatever device is plugged into that port inherits that ip address? No you can't.

– joeqwerty
Mar 10 '15 at 14:00










1 Answer
1






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0














I don't fully know the device, but a quick search reveals that it supports 1-1 NAT. So if you can configure multiple IP addresses on its public interface, it should be able to NAT an entire external/public IP over to a designated internal IP.



In the end, your server would have e.g.
10.0.0.203 and the router will map your xx.xx.xx.203 to that ip. etc.






share|improve this answer
























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    1 Answer
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    active

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    active

    oldest

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    0














    I don't fully know the device, but a quick search reveals that it supports 1-1 NAT. So if you can configure multiple IP addresses on its public interface, it should be able to NAT an entire external/public IP over to a designated internal IP.



    In the end, your server would have e.g.
    10.0.0.203 and the router will map your xx.xx.xx.203 to that ip. etc.






    share|improve this answer




























      0














      I don't fully know the device, but a quick search reveals that it supports 1-1 NAT. So if you can configure multiple IP addresses on its public interface, it should be able to NAT an entire external/public IP over to a designated internal IP.



      In the end, your server would have e.g.
      10.0.0.203 and the router will map your xx.xx.xx.203 to that ip. etc.






      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0







        I don't fully know the device, but a quick search reveals that it supports 1-1 NAT. So if you can configure multiple IP addresses on its public interface, it should be able to NAT an entire external/public IP over to a designated internal IP.



        In the end, your server would have e.g.
        10.0.0.203 and the router will map your xx.xx.xx.203 to that ip. etc.






        share|improve this answer













        I don't fully know the device, but a quick search reveals that it supports 1-1 NAT. So if you can configure multiple IP addresses on its public interface, it should be able to NAT an entire external/public IP over to a designated internal IP.



        In the end, your server would have e.g.
        10.0.0.203 and the router will map your xx.xx.xx.203 to that ip. etc.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Mar 10 '15 at 20:22









        Daniel ADaniel A

        8819




        8819






























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