On 3/5/2012 10:52 AM, Christopher Schultz wrote:
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David,
On 3/1/12 7:18 PM, David Kerber wrote:
On 3/1/2012 5:55 PM, giovo87 wrote:
is this the only one solution?
changing some router's configurations or ubuntu's firewall
configurations can i have the same result?
Actually, you'll have to change BOTH of those to allow the port you
want through. And then your ISP also has to allow incoming
connections on the desired port. I have done this, but I had to
sign up for a business account with my ISP, because their TOS
didn't allow me to run a server on a home acct.
Most ISP TOSs (at least in the US) say the same thing, but they don't
really care unless you start eating-up a ton of bandwidth. It's
largely an unforced policy but it's there so they can stop you if you
start to generate a lot of traffic.
Yes, that's the way mine was, but the business account was only $2.00
more than the home acct, so I decided to stay legal on it. They also
bumped up my outgoing bandwidth when I upgraded, though the incoming
stayed the same. I get better tech support response as well.
d
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