Hello all!
I have two systems on two different WAN networks. One of them is a code server, which runs an app on port 1000.
That system is also running an HTTP server on port 80.
I have a client that is blocking requests out of their network to port 1000.
I have a second machine that's not running HTTP. My plan is to set that up as a port forward, so that all TCP traffic sent to that machine on port 80 is forwarded to port 1000 on the other machine.
Basically make the second machine a pass through: WEB <---80---> PROXY <---1000---> Code Server
I once set this up on a W7 machine using netsh, but the destination port was local.
I looked into using NEtTCPIP on powershell (with New-NetRoute), but I think this assumes a local port map.
I have two systems on two different WAN networks. One of them is a code server, which runs an app on port 1000.
That system is also running an HTTP server on port 80.
I have a client that is blocking requests out of their network to port 1000.
I have a second machine that's not running HTTP. My plan is to set that up as a port forward, so that all TCP traffic sent to that machine on port 80 is forwarded to port 1000 on the other machine.
Basically make the second machine a pass through: WEB <---80---> PROXY <---1000---> Code Server
I once set this up on a W7 machine using netsh, but the destination port was local.
I looked into using NEtTCPIP on powershell (with New-NetRoute), but I think this assumes a local port map.
My Computer
System One
-
- OS
- Win8