Hello
When we had 5 Static IP addresses I used the BT Business Hub to allocate each server an internet-facing IP address.
We moved most of our servers to cloud services and downgraded our BT Business service to a single fixed IP address.
At this time I was advised by BT to turn off the "Static IP address" in the BT Business Hub 5 and revert to DHCP and port forwarding to the single remaining internet-facing server.
This works fine; the Mac Server is offering its services to the internet as required ... except ...
Q: Why should I not use the "Static IP Address" setting on the router as I was doing when we had 5 static addresses?
Since the Mac Server needs to be available nearly 24/7 I am reluctant to experiment before understanding whether there is a very good reason for not using the router's "Static IUP Address" setting. The unintended consequences of network misconfiguration can be stressful and time-consuming, so I just want to make sure I am on the ball with this one!
Thanks!
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi BobbyDotGov
With a single static IP, we auto assign this to the router when it logs into the line and you would port forward to the server, so when you ping the IP you are pinging the router not the server, if you want the server to be assigned an IP directly you would need to go back to a range of IP's and then enable the range in the router and assign one if the IP's to the server.
Regards
Ryan
Hi BobbyDotGov
With a single static IP, we auto assign this to the router when it logs into the line and you would port forward to the server, so when you ping the IP you are pinging the router not the server, if you want the server to be assigned an IP directly you would need to go back to a range of IP's and then enable the range in the router and assign one if the IP's to the server.
Regards
Ryan
Ah, that makes sense. Thank you for clarifying!
Thanks
Bob