09-12-2010 03:06 AM - edited 03-11-2019 11:39 AM
I have a DSL modem ( Thomson) at my home and Cisco ASA 5520. Currently the modem is used for providing internet to some PC's and its getting a DHCP ip address.
So how can i configure the ASA to work with ASA ?
I want to work on some practice labs
Please can someone help.
Solved! Go to Solution.
09-12-2010 05:35 AM
Hello,
You can configure the ASA just like another PC. You can give it a static IP
in the range of DSL Modem inside address with DSL modem as the default
gateway (or you can configure the outside interface to get IP address via
DHCP with setroute option enabled). Then you can use interface IP (or any
other unused IP in the same range) for NAT. Since DSL modem will be the
default gateway, all traffic will be sent to DSL modem. DSL modem will apply
NAT again and send the traffic to the outside.
On the inside interface of the ASA, you can use whatever IP range you like
(something other than the outside IP range) and connect a workstation
directly to that interface. Make sure that the workstation points to ASA as
its default gateway. Configure NAT on the ASA so that the workstation IP
gets Natted when going out of the firewall.
Hope this helps.
Regards,
NT
09-12-2010 05:35 AM
Hello,
You can configure the ASA just like another PC. You can give it a static IP
in the range of DSL Modem inside address with DSL modem as the default
gateway (or you can configure the outside interface to get IP address via
DHCP with setroute option enabled). Then you can use interface IP (or any
other unused IP in the same range) for NAT. Since DSL modem will be the
default gateway, all traffic will be sent to DSL modem. DSL modem will apply
NAT again and send the traffic to the outside.
On the inside interface of the ASA, you can use whatever IP range you like
(something other than the outside IP range) and connect a workstation
directly to that interface. Make sure that the workstation points to ASA as
its default gateway. Configure NAT on the ASA so that the workstation IP
gets Natted when going out of the firewall.
Hope this helps.
Regards,
NT
09-12-2010 07:06 AM
Hi NT,
Thanks for your fast response.
I got the basic IP
Is it possible to make VPN,port forwarding etc..
09-12-2010 08:35 AM
Hello Samir,
As long as you can do port forwarding on the DSL modem/Router, you can
configure the firewall to do VPN. The same thing applies to other port
forwarding configurations as well. You need to check the DSL Modem/Router to
make sure that it can do port forwarding.
Regards,
NT
09-12-2010 11:58 AM
Hi NT,
Thanks for all that clarification.
Discover and save your favorite ideas. Come back to expert answers, step-by-step guides, recent topics, and more.
New here? Get started with these tips. How to use Community New member guide