Hi Charles, Yes, you can create static nat to the vm, then just enable the necessary ports on firewall.
A reason of no port range mapping is unable to guarantee 1:1 mapping in order(e.g. if you map public ports 10000-20000 to vm ports 10000-20000, there is no guarantee public ports 10000 would map to vm ports 10000), so you'd better use static nat for range. -- Sheng On Tue, May 29, 2012 at 2:33 PM, Charles Russell <charles.russ...@kisinc.net> wrote: > I should have stated, we are running 3.0.2. > > If no one can provide a simple way to do a port range, then how about setting > up static nats for an advanced zone. > > > > Charles Russell > Senior Consulting Engineer > Knowledge Information Solutions, Inc. > Phone: (757) 275-7523 > Cell: (757) 647-6236 > Fax: (757) 486-2318 > > -----Original Message----- > From: Charles Russell [mailto:charles.russ...@kisinc.net] > Sent: Tuesday, May 29, 2012 5:20 PM > To: cloudstack-dev@incubator.apache.org > Subject: Need port range for Forwarding > > Guys, > > Is there a way to add a range of rules for port forwarding? Example I need > to add 10000-20000. Is there a wildcard? I really don’t want to have to api > call all these ports. > > > Charles Russell > Senior Consulting Engineer > Knowledge Information Solutions, Inc. > P: (757) 275-7523 > M: (757) 647-6236 > F: (757) 486-2318