I ran into my setup with both a modem and router. After hours of tinkering i figured out that i had to forward the ports through both devices.

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Yunobot 2019-01-04 14:20:55 +00:00
parent cb51e359c4
commit 7941a87f75

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@ -32,6 +32,10 @@ Opening the ports listed below is necessary for the various services available i
* [XMPP](/XMPP_en): 5222 <small>(clients)</small>, 5269 <small>(servers)</small> * [XMPP](/XMPP_en): 5222 <small>(clients)</small>, 5269 <small>(servers)</small>
* [Email](/email_en): 25, 587 <small>(SMTP)</small>, 993 <small>(IMAP)</small> * [Email](/email_en): 25, 587 <small>(SMTP)</small>, 993 <small>(IMAP)</small>
If you use both a modem and a router, then you need to do the following:
1. first on the modem (the box closest to the internet) create rules to forward the above ports to your router;
2. then on the router (the box between the modem and your devices) create rules to forward the above ports to the static IP address for your server.
<div class="alert alert-warning" markdown="1"> <div class="alert alert-warning" markdown="1">
<span class="glyphicon glyphicon-warning-sign"></span> Some internet service providers block port 25 (mail SMTP) by default to fight spam. Some other ISP don't allow to use port 80/443 (web) freely, though it's less likely. Depending on the ISP, it might be possible to open them in the admin interface... Check [this page](isp_en) for more info. <span class="glyphicon glyphicon-warning-sign"></span> Some internet service providers block port 25 (mail SMTP) by default to fight spam. Some other ISP don't allow to use port 80/443 (web) freely, though it's less likely. Depending on the ISP, it might be possible to open them in the admin interface... Check [this page](isp_en) for more info.
</div> </div>