On 18/08/2021 19:41, wendellkb...@gmail.com wrote:
I set up my router to port forward. I was using NOIP with my previous ISP
because the IP address was changing. With my new ISP I don't have that
problem. My goal is to use something like "www.mywebpage.com" to access my
home server instead of usi
On 8/18/21 10:48 AM, wendellkb...@gmail.com wrote:
> can use the internal IP address on my home network and bring up my web page. I
> can input the static IP of my router and access my web page.
>
Does your ISP allow incoming server connections?
If your Internet service is a standard "user" (o
If you ping (or dig, or nslookup, or ...) your www.mywebpage.com (the noip
name) from outside your home is resolved to you public IP address?
I think it's not an apache related issue.
El dc., 18 d’ag. 2021, 20:41, va escriure:
> I set up my router to port forward. I was using NOIP with my pre
I set up my router to port forward. I was using NOIP with my previous ISP
because the IP address was changing. With my new ISP I don't have that
problem. My goal is to use something like "www.mywebpage.com" to access my
home server instead of using my actual IP. I am thinking about having a
place f
> Date: Wednesday, August 18, 2021 12:48:36 -0500
> From: wendellkb...@gmail.com
>
> I am wondering if anyone has any idea as to what could be happening
> to prevent me from using the URL I have set up with No-IP.
>
> Particulars:
>
> 1.I have a static IP
> 2.I setup NOIP to send por
Hello,
I am wondering if anyone has any idea as to what could be happening to
prevent me from using the URL I have set up with No-IP.
Particulars:
1. I have a static IP
2. I setup NOIP to send port 80 traffic to port 8080
I can use the internal IP address on my home network an