Guide to PortForwarding

Discussion in 'Archives' started by r4ang3 k1ng, Jun 19, 2008.

Guide to PortForwarding
  1. Unread #1 - Jun 19, 2008 at 6:16 AM
  2. r4ang3 k1ng
    Joined:
    Jun 30, 2007
    Posts:
    60
    Referrals:
    0
    Sythe Gold:
    0

    r4ang3 k1ng Member

    Guide to PortForwarding

    Hey, i found a great website which shows you exactly what you need to know and how to port forward, since i don't know exactly what you router is, the website is
    http://www.portforward.com





    What is PortForwarding?

    this section has been taken directly from 'http://www.portforward.com/help/portforwarding.htm' all credits to them :)

    There are a couple of concepts you need to know before you can understand port forwarding. I'm going to make a couple broad statements that are almost always true. For simplicity lets assume they are true for now.

    1.) Every device on the internet has at least one ip address. The IP address is a number that is used to identify a device. For more information on ip addresses refer to our What is an IP Address page.

    2.) Every IP address is divided up into many ports. When one computer sends data to another computer, it sends it from a port on an ip address to a port on an ip address. For more information on ports refer to our What is a Port page.

    3.) A port can only be used by one program at a time.

    Now that we've got those general concepts out of the way let's talk about NAT. NAT is an acronym for Network Address Translation. NAT takes one ip address and basically breaks it into many ip addresses.


    Here the external ip address is broken into two internal ip addresses. The first ip address "IP Address1" is the gateway. While "IP Address2" is the ip address of the first computer. Take note that the router has two ip addresses. It has the external ip address, and an internal ip address which acts as the gateway for every computer on the network.


    Excuse my rough drawing. Computers on the internal network can only "see" internal ip addresses. So computers on the internal network can not send data directly to a computer outside of the network. When a computer on the network wants to send data to a computer outside of the network, it sends the data to the gateway. Remember the gateway is the internal ip address of the router. The router then takes this data and sends it out to the computer on the internet. The router sends the data out of the external ip address. The same thing is true of computers on the internet. A computer outside of the network can not "see" a computer inside of the network. They can only "see" and send data to the external ip address of the router. The router must then decide what to do with this data. Lucky for us NAT takes care of most of the work for us. There are some programs that NAT was not designed to work with, those are the programs we need to set up port forwarding for. Okay take a deep breath! We are on to port forwarding.

    Now that you understand the general concepts of a network, explaining port forwarding is easy. When a computer on the internet sends data to the external ip address of the router, the router needs to know what to do with the data. Port Forwarding simply tells the router which computer on the local area network to send the data to. When you have port forwarding rules set up, your router takes the data off of the external ip address:port number and sends that data to an internal ip address:port number. Port Forwarding rules are created per port. So a rule set up for port 53 will only work for port 53.

    A port can only be used by one program at a time! Think of how this rule interacts with NAT. Well you've only got one external ip address on your router. When computer 1 is using port 500, it is using port 500 on it's internal ip address. If you have set up a port forwarding rule for computer 1 and port 500, the external ip address's port 500 is also in use. This means that you can only use port 500 on one computer on the network at a time. Using port 500 on two computers at the same time would violate the one program rule, and your data would get messed up. Most routers require you to specify an internal ip address to forward ports to, just for this reason. Some do not, so be aware of this. Port Forwarding rules will only work for one computer at a time!


    Good luck Port forwarding
     
  3. Unread #2 - Jun 19, 2008 at 8:32 AM
  4. venom
    Joined:
    Sep 8, 2007
    Posts:
    2,499
    Referrals:
    1
    Sythe Gold:
    2

    venom Half psychotic sick Hypnotic
    Retired Sectional Moderator

    Guide to PortForwarding

    Write your own guide rather than pre-written one's, give's you more of a change to get into the UE Team!
     
  5. Unread #3 - Jun 19, 2008 at 8:35 AM
  6. SuF
    Joined:
    Jan 21, 2007
    Posts:
    14,212
    Referrals:
    28
    Sythe Gold:
    1,234
    Discord Unique ID:
    203283096668340224
    <3 n4n0 Two Factor Authentication User Community Participant Spam Forum Participant Sythe's 10th Anniversary

    SuF Legend
    Pirate Retired Global Moderator

    Guide to PortForwarding

    wow, this is dumb... if you want to portforward you go to there site and they have great guides and step by step for each router and game... -.-
     
  7. Unread #4 - Jul 24, 2008 at 9:14 PM
  8. Intellect Reject
    Referrals:
    0

    Intellect Reject Guest

    Guide to PortForwarding

    Yea - it gets pretty detailed .. but your stealing info (copyright infrigment!) :p
     
  9. Unread #5 - Jul 25, 2008 at 1:37 AM
  10. orlando_jordan
    Joined:
    Jun 28, 2008
    Posts:
    1,310
    Referrals:
    1
    Sythe Gold:
    0

    orlando_jordan Guru
    Banned

    Guide to PortForwarding

    you just copied this there site, you fail
     
  11. Unread #6 - Jul 25, 2008 at 1:59 AM
  12. Tezlin
    Joined:
    Apr 9, 2008
    Posts:
    1,780
    Referrals:
    0
    Sythe Gold:
    0

    Tezlin Guru
    Banned

    Guide to PortForwarding

    I would rather just have the link, than have you waste your time posting here. <3
     
  13. Unread #7 - Jul 26, 2008 at 9:41 AM
  14. Faculty3000
    Joined:
    Apr 26, 2008
    Posts:
    813
    Referrals:
    0
    Sythe Gold:
    0

    Faculty3000 Apprentice

    Guide to PortForwarding

    Dude, although it is average-detailed and all (with no pictures), I would rather go to the website myself and read it there. You fail mate, and this will not help you to apply for the UE team if you applying like this. So in other words, write your own guide.
     
< rune dagger or DRAGON DAGGER | Need a TRUSTED MM for acc, acc trade >

Users viewing this thread
1 guest


 
 
Adblock breaks this site