El 18/01/09, Carlos E. R. escribió:
Se puede hacer igualmente de esa forma como con NAT; yo lo hago con NAT, desde el equipo anfitrión, es sólo cuestión de decirle la ruta:
No lo digo yo... lo pone en el manual de Virtualbox >:-) *** A virtual machine with NAT enabled acts much like a real computer that connects to the Internet through a router. The "router", in this case, is the VirtualBox networking engine, which maps traffic from and to the virtual machine transparently. The disadvantage of NAT mode is that, much like a private network behind a router, the virtual machine is invisible and unreachable from the outside internet; you cannot run a server this way unless you set up port forwarding (described below). (...) As the virtual machine is connected to a private network internal to VirtualBox and invisible to the host, network services on the guest are not accessible to the host machine or to other computers on the same network. However, VirtualBox can make given services available outside of the guest by using port forwarding. This means that VirtualBox listens to certain ports on the host and resends all packets which arrive on them to the guest on the ports used by the services being forwarded. *** Es decir, sin configurar "port-forwarding" en el cliente se supone que no es posible conectar con el host usando NAT :-? Saludos, -- Camaleón =��u��y��jV���+��"�f�u맙��j7������zϮ�˛���m�)z{.��+���j��zw�zZ�yثy�"�w�r����&jw^�y��ƣy�)z{.������^�ˬz��