When you go to whatismyip.com it will give you the IP of your ADSL connection, not your computers. You will get the same address for both your laptop and your mini if you try that. To see a computer's local ip you will have to look in your Control Panel, or type ifconfig in a command line terminal (the command is ifconfig on Mac/Linux and ipconfig in Windows). Then you will have the local network address for your computer. Sorry if I'm just telling you stuff you already know, but I wanted to make sure.
You will need to configure the firewall on your router to allow http access from outside connections. Use NAT (network address translation) to put HTTP traffic (port 80) through to the local address of your mac mini. You should set it up so that the mini is always assigned the same IP address, it should be under DHCP settings on your router configuration. Once you configure the firewall properly you may be able to use the 77.250.13.83 address to reach your mini's website even from within your network, but I can't remember the exact router option that is needed to do that kind of thing. I think it may just be called loopback.
I can't remember what the default firewall options were on my own mac (I'm now running Ubuntu on it anyway), but you should also try to access the mini from your laptop while connected to the same network to make sure that the mini is allowing HTTP connections through its own firewall. There are options to allow different kinds of networking through the Mac's firewall in the Control Panel, you should have a look at them. | [reply] |
Thank you, blues. No, you are not telling me things I know. In fact, this is probably the point where I got lost so many times in the past. When I now browse through my router settings and books again, things start to make sense. I hesitate to try out all the suggested changes yet, but I'll due that soon. I also have about a hundred new questions now, but let me do my own homework first.
Allright then, just one more tiny question. You mentioned the ifconfig/ipconfig. My laptop is an Eee PC with its original Xandros Linux, but that hasn't got neither. Doing an apt-get attempt terminates with a message that the package couldn't be found. Is there an alternative?
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Make sure to read the Terms of Service for your provider. Few of them, if any, allow users to run websites from their home machines/connections. If they don't, you could probably do it ethically if your bandwidth was going to be low or the usage was chiefly personal but if your account got suspended you might be out a lot of time and effort and have to start over with a new provider or a VPS.
These guys are in the US but I had a very good 2-year experience with them on a VPS account: JohnCompanies. If I needed one again, I'd go back to them in a second.
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