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Forum Discussion
kbrumbaugh
Jul 09, 2024Aspirant
RBR750 Local NAT Loopback Not Working
I am having issues with NAT Loopback not working with my RBR750 when accessing a resource on my local LAN. I've reviewed this thread (Orbi NAT Hairpinning/Loopback Not Working - NETGEAR Communities)...
CrimpOn
Jul 11, 2024Guru - Experienced User
Did an experiment:
Connected RBR750 running firmware v7.2.6.31 to the primary Orbi network. This router is assigned 192.168.1.71 to its WAN address.
Created port forwarding rules on the RBR750
- Port 5000 to LAN IP 10.0.0.2 (a Windows computer)
- Port 5001 to LAN IP 10.0.0.2 (the Windows computer)
Installed Rebex (free) web server on this Windows computer. Defined the listening ports as
- Port 5000 for http
- Port 5001 for https
Started the web server and told Windows to allow both private and public access through the firewall.
On the primary network, opened Edge web browser to https://192.168.1.71:5001 After the usual complaints about security, the Rebex web page opened. Thus, the RBR750 forward connection from the WAN port to the internal web server.
Connected a Chromebook to the RBR750 WiFi network and opened Chrome browser to https://192.168.1.71:5001 (the WAN i.e. "public" IP of the RBR750). After the usual security complaint, the Rebex web page opened. Thus, NAT-loopback on the RBR750 sent the connection to the Rebex web server.
It would be a chore to set up a DNS entry to test this loopback issue and we've already seen that using the URL and the hardcoded IP address behave the same.
So, what is different? I am testing against a plain vanilla web server and the goal is to connect to a Synology NAS, which I do not have to experiment with.
It is beginning to appear that the only consistent method of connecting with this Synology NAS is to use Synology Quick Connect. Perhaps not the most efficient method in a network utilization sense, but consistent in both internet and LAN scenarios.
kbrumbaugh
Jul 11, 2024Aspirant
CrimpOn Out of curiosity, if you still have the Rebex web server enabled, will it allow you to create a second site that uses port 80 and port 443 while running the initial test site on 5000 and 5001, thus having port forwarding to 4 listening ports on the same server?
My Synology runs a number of different services with 443 and 80 supporting Web Services, while 5000 and 5001 support the management UI and a few other file, audio and surveillance services. I'm now curios if there may be something with the SSL associations between 443 and 5001.
- CrimpOnJul 11, 2024Guru - Experienced User
Well, darn. This Rebex free web server goes with the last port mentioned in the configuration file. Does not appear to be capable of listening to multiple ports. I've tried listing 5001 and then 443 (it goes with 443) and 443 first then 5001 (it goes with 5001).
I'll see what other free web servers are available. (but not optimistic)
Does Synology have an active user community? While our focus is on the Netgear Orbi, Synology users may have experience with NAT-loopback with other routers.