From cf465146f65883995ce63d2f5e4e1332b85b0d58 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: zleyyij Date: Sun, 19 May 2024 10:39:26 -0600 Subject: [PATCH] vault backup: 2024-05-19 10:39:26 --- IT/RouterOS port forwarding.md | 11 +++++++---- 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/IT/RouterOS port forwarding.md b/IT/RouterOS port forwarding.md index a274eef..f69753c 100644 --- a/IT/RouterOS port forwarding.md +++ b/IT/RouterOS port forwarding.md @@ -1,9 +1,12 @@ To port forward with RouterOS, you need allow the port through the firewall, *and* actually forward traffic # Allow through the firewall -1. Set `Dst. Address` to the internal IP you want to allow traffic to -2. Set `Protocol` to `6 (tcp)` -3. Set `Dst. Port` to the port you want to allow traffic through -4. Set `In. Interface List` to `all` (I'm sure this isn't the corre) +1. +2. Set `Dst. Address` to the internal IP you want to allow traffic to +3. Set `Protocol` to `6 (tcp)` +4. Set `Dst. Port` to the port you want to allow traffic through +5. Set `In. Interface List` to `all` (I'm sure this isn't the most correct option), but it works +6. Set `Action` to `accept` +7. (Optionally) add a comment expaianin # Forward traffic 1. Navigate to IP > Firewall > NAT, select `Add New` 2. Set `Chain` to `dstnat`, set `Protocol` to `6 (tcp)`