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Single Point Internet



 
 
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  #1  
Old November 17th 15, 05:36 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
OldGuy
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 75
Default Single Point Internet

I have two Win 7 PCs and two Win XP PCs, all Pro versions and several
NAS sitting on my LAN.

Would it be beneficial and or doable to have only one PC, call it the
master, connected directly to the internet through the ATTUVerse modem?
What are the pros and cons?

If so, can someone explain or point me to a how to for one point
internet access.

My definition of one point internet would be to have the LAN
disconnected from the internet but PCs have access to the internet
through the master PC therefore I can monitor all traffic to the
internet on the master PC.

Would I need additional hardware beyond the two switches and secondary
router that I already have? Just reroute differently.

--- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: ---
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  #2  
Old November 17th 15, 06:02 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
mike[_10_]
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Posts: 1,073
Default Single Point Internet

On 11/17/2015 8:36 AM, OldGuy wrote:
I have two Win 7 PCs and two Win XP PCs, all Pro versions and several
NAS sitting on my LAN.

Would it be beneficial and or doable to have only one PC, call it the
master, connected directly to the internet through the ATTUVerse modem?
What are the pros and cons?

If so, can someone explain or point me to a how to for one point
internet access.

My definition of one point internet would be to have the LAN
disconnected from the internet but PCs have access to the internet
through the master PC therefore I can monitor all traffic to the
internet on the master PC.


What's your definition of "monitor all traffic" and what tool
are you gonna use to do that? And what are you gonna do with the
data once you acquire it?

Getting a PC off the internet, but still active on your lan
is easy...if it's just a matter of convenience. If you expect
greater resistance to hacking, that's a bigger issue.

Would I need additional hardware beyond the two switches and secondary
router that I already have? Just reroute differently.

--- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: ---


  #3  
Old November 17th 15, 06:40 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
~BD~[_12_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 40
Default Single Point Internet

On 17/11/2015 17:02, mike wrote:
What's your definition of "monitor all traffic" and what tool
are you gonna use to do that?


He can use Wireshark https://www.wireshark.org/
  #4  
Old November 17th 15, 06:45 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Paul
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 18,275
Default Single Point Internet

OldGuy wrote:
I have two Win 7 PCs and two Win XP PCs, all Pro versions and several
NAS sitting on my LAN.

Would it be beneficial and or doable to have only one PC, call it the
master, connected directly to the internet through the ATTUVerse modem?
What are the pros and cons?

If so, can someone explain or point me to a how to for one point
internet access.

My definition of one point internet would be to have the LAN
disconnected from the internet but PCs have access to the internet
through the master PC therefore I can monitor all traffic to the
internet on the master PC.

Would I need additional hardware beyond the two switches and secondary
router that I already have? Just reroute differently.


ICS
--- FIOS modem/router ---- PC_with_two_NICs --- router ---- PCTV
(Set for Internet ---- PC2
Connection Sharing) ---- Buffalo NAS
---- WD Cloud NAS

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intern...ection_Sharing

One limitation of ICS under Windows, is the LAN segment on the right
of that picture (labeled "ICS"), is fixed at 192.168.0.x subnet. It's possible
if you set up the PC_with_two_NICs under Linux, you might
have more choices on the subnet. This is only an issue,
if you're trying to avoid "upsetting" the existing setups.

I have set up ICS in the past, but don't remember anything
of the experience. Maybe someone else can give a rundown on
the operational characteristics.

When you string a bunch of routers like that, sometimes you manage
to "partition" or isolate the file sharing on one PC from the other PCs.
If the PC_with_two_NICs is not doing file sharing, then chances
are the above diagram will work OK.

Paul
  #5  
Old November 18th 15, 02:24 AM posted to alt.windows7.general
mike[_10_]
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Posts: 1,073
Default Single Point Internet

On 11/17/2015 9:40 AM, ~BD~ wrote:
On 17/11/2015 17:02, mike wrote:
What's your definition of "monitor all traffic" and what tool
are you gonna use to do that?


He can use Wireshark https://www.wireshark.org/


Sure, but to what end?
Anybody who thinks they can manually decipher ALL traffic with
wireshark has a lot of time on their hands.
Hence, the request for clarification.

I've been trying to sort out wake on lan magic packets. I have wireshark
running on a laptop to monitor traffic...heavily filtered.
I don't have to
route the traffic through any particular machine...it
just works for what I need.

I try to PREVENT instead of monitor traffic.
I did this when I had too many machines and metered internet.
I didn't want them all burning thru my data allocation for no
good reason.

My router is at 192.168.1.1
My primary machine has a default gateway of 192.168.1.1
Other machines have a default gateway of 192.168.1.250
They can access each other, but attempts to leave the
subnet get dumped.

To access the internet, I have options.
A utility to change the default gateway.
Just use VNC or Remote Desktop to actually
use the primary machine's connection.
I make no claims for absolute security. You can
easily subvert it. It just worked most
of the time for what I needed done.

It all comes down to what the OP is trying to accomplish.
And we don't know that.
  #6  
Old November 18th 15, 07:42 AM posted to alt.windows7.general
Paul
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 18,275
Default Single Point Internet

~BD~ wrote:
On 17/11/2015 17:02, mike wrote:
What's your definition of "monitor all traffic" and what tool
are you gonna use to do that?


He can use Wireshark https://www.wireshark.org/


The key to this, is observability.

The device running Wireshark must be located where it
can see all WAN traffic. This assumes WAN-bound traffic
is the source of the complaint.

That's why in the diagram, I placed a PC between the
Internet modem and the rest of the network. The machine
needs two NIC interfaces, to do it this particular way.

ICS
--- FIOS modem/router ---- PC_with_two_NICs --- router ---- PCTV
(Set for Internet ---- PC2
Connection Sharing) ---- Buffalo NAS
(Wireshark here) ---- WD Cloud NAS

HTH,
Paul
  #7  
Old November 18th 15, 11:35 AM posted to alt.windows7.general
~BD~[_12_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 40
Default Single Point Internet

On 18/11/2015 06:42, Paul wrote:
~BD~ wrote:
On 17/11/2015 17:02, mike wrote:
What's your definition of "monitor all traffic" and what tool
are you gonna use to do that?


He can use Wireshark https://www.wireshark.org/


The key to this, is observability.

The device running Wireshark must be located where it
can see all WAN traffic. This assumes WAN-bound traffic
is the source of the complaint.

That's why in the diagram, I placed a PC between the
Internet modem and the rest of the network. The machine
needs two NIC interfaces, to do it this particular way.

ICS
--- FIOS modem/router ---- PC_with_two_NICs --- router ---- PCTV
(Set for Internet ---- PC2
Connection Sharing) ---- Buffalo NAS
(Wireshark here) ---- WD Cloud NAS

HTH,
Paul



Just about everything I've ever read in your posts has been helpful,
Paul! Thanks. :-)


  #8  
Old November 18th 15, 11:50 AM posted to alt.windows7.general
Char Jackson
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 10,449
Default Single Point Internet

On Wed, 18 Nov 2015 01:42:06 -0500, Paul wrote:

~BD~ wrote:
On 17/11/2015 17:02, mike wrote:
What's your definition of "monitor all traffic" and what tool
are you gonna use to do that?


He can use Wireshark https://www.wireshark.org/


The key to this, is observability.

The device running Wireshark must be located where it
can see all WAN traffic. This assumes WAN-bound traffic
is the source of the complaint.

That's why in the diagram, I placed a PC between the
Internet modem and the rest of the network. The machine
needs two NIC interfaces, to do it this particular way.

ICS
--- FIOS modem/router ---- PC_with_two_NICs --- router ---- PCTV
(Set for Internet ---- PC2
Connection Sharing) ---- Buffalo NAS
(Wireshark here) ---- WD Cloud NAS

HTH,
Paul



In the old days, you'd stick a hub there, instead of a dual-NIC PC, but hubs
have pretty much disappeared now. I haven't seen one since the mid to late
80's, and it was proudly advertised as 10 megabit, so it'd be a bottleneck
by today's standards.

A pfSense box would be a decent choice for a proxy/gateway. Meanwhile, it
would also serve as a firewall.

--

Char Jackson
  #9  
Old November 18th 15, 12:47 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Andy Burns[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 399
Default Single Point Internet

Char Jackson wrote:

In the old days, you'd stick a hub there, instead of a dual-NIC PC, but hubs
have pretty much disappeared now. I haven't seen one since the mid to late
80's, and it was proudly advertised as 10 megabit, so it'd be a bottleneck
by today's standards.


Nowadays you could use a gigabit switch with port mirroring, this one is
considerably cheaper than an 'enterprise' switch ...

http://www.dual-comm.com/port-mirroring-LAN_switch.htm

  #10  
Old November 18th 15, 12:51 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Andy Burns[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 399
Default Single Point Internet

Andy Burns wrote:

Nowadays you could use a gigabit switch with port mirroring, this one is
considerably cheaper than an 'enterprise' switch ...

http://www.dual-comm.com/port-mirroring-LAN_switch.htm


Sorry, wrong link, that's 10/100Mb, they do a GbE version, bit more
expensive, plus other copper/fibre TAP devices ...

http://www.dual-comm.com/gigabit_port-mirroring-LAN_switch.htm

  #11  
Old November 18th 15, 11:57 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Char Jackson
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 10,449
Default Single Point Internet

On Wed, 18 Nov 2015 11:51:20 +0000, Andy Burns
wrote:

Andy Burns wrote:

Nowadays you could use a gigabit switch with port mirroring, this one is
considerably cheaper than an 'enterprise' switch ...

http://www.dual-comm.com/port-mirroring-LAN_switch.htm


Sorry, wrong link, that's 10/100Mb, they do a GbE version, bit more
expensive, plus other copper/fibre TAP devices ...

http://www.dual-comm.com/gigabit_port-mirroring-LAN_switch.htm


Yep, thanks, I meant to mention port mirroring. I have a virtual network
device that offers port mirroring, which comes in handy at times. I'm not
sure, but maybe dd-wrt even does it. They've made it do everything else, so
why not that.

--

Char Jackson
 




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