Stewart wrote:Creating an FTP proxy service and redirecting it to another port on the server (after reconfiguring the FTP server to talk on that port) does work but can’t handle PASV mode, which unfortunately, I need to support.
Doing the same for the local POP service (I figure I’ll leave the SMTP well alone and catch any viruses on the way to and from the client) seems to work OK. It won’t allow the server to deliver infected mails to the clients, however it does seem to allow infect mails to be sent from the clients to the server and out into the aether.
As long as WinGate is the default gateway for the client machines, and the have to use WinGate to get to the machine hosting the other services, then WinGate will redirect POP and FTP (and smtp in a way) up to the services for testing.
However its hard if you are on the same sub net as the server. In that Case I would assign an additional IP in a different subnet to that server machine, and one on the same subnet to WinGate, and point the clients to the servers new IP, forcing Wingate to route for it.
Tim