Forum Discussion
suthakamal
4 years agoFriendly Neighbour
Pure fiber- looks like public IP, but is unreachable outside Telus
I’ve got Telus PureFibre 1.5/.95 service in North Vancouver. The Nokia fiber device is plugged straight into an Eero. The Eero gets what looks like a public IP address (173.180.26.88). All the de...
- 4 years ago
I can ping your external IP so it is indeed public. Perhaps you have some firewall rules blocking access on the Eero?
xray
4 years agoHero
That could be the Eero doing an internal loopback to simulate external access. Typically you can't access the external IP from inside the local network. However it does confirm the port forwarding is working on the loopback. Not sure if that translates to actual external access.
BTW, there is no point checking ports that don't have any services running. All open ports will report as closed if there are no services to answer on that port.
suthakamal
4 years agoFriendly Neighbour
Yup, I’ve got multiple ports forwarded to 22 on the Mac where SSH lives, and nothing works (22, 2200, 8080, 65001) from the outside Internet.
Shouldn’t another device on the LAN be able to connect to a LAN-peer via a public IP and port forwarding? I mean, the public IP should be routable, and the Eero ought to do the appropriate NAT routing to connect both endpoints, no?
I’ve plugged another ethernet cable into the Nokia fibre modem to see if I can get another “external” connection to test, but the connection doesn’t seem physically active, so that seems a dead-end.
I’m wondering if I should use wireshark/tcpdump and put my Mac w/ 2 promiscuous mode NICs between the Nokia fibre modem and the Eero to validate that packets are actually coming in, and not getting dropped by the Eero. Surely there’s a less painful way to test? 🙂