I'm new to setting up proxies, and also new to using Wingate. So far, I really like Wingate and the features it offers, but I'm having having trouble getting it to work the way I need it to.
First, I work in a school that is part of a large district of schools. However, the school I'm in is different in that the students are doing online learning. That means they are on computers all day. Because of that, they do everything they can to go to websites that they shouldn't, such as Facebook, Youtube, Pandora, etc. Most of these sites chew up a lot of bandwidth, which is taken away from the other schools. There is a LightSpeed web filter in place on the network, but that does no good as the students just use proxies to get around the filter. This is why I wanted to put in place a proxy, to only allow them on certain sites.
This brings me to my other point: I have no control over the network. The school I'm in just sort of borrows the network of the district. I've talked with the network engineers, and they have allowed me to install a proxy server, as long as it does not interfere with the current network. The schools run on a complete network: Active Directory, DHCP, DNS, LightSpeed filtering, and each building has their own gateway which connect to the main gateway in the main office building.
I guess my first question then, is can Wingate run on a network that already has an established gateway, which means the Wingate server cannot be a gateway? I have a static IP address set on the external network card, along with the network's gateway (a Cisco router). The internal NIC is currently set to obtain the information from DHCP. The client computer I am testing with is unable to connect to the internet with this setup (even with using WGIC). So my other question I have is, if running the internal NIC off DHCP is the wrong thing to do, what exactly do I do to set it up right? I still want the clients to get DHCP addresses (there are about 80 total computers, but only around 60 are actually being used at one time), but I would prefer them to go through the Wingate server (I cannot turn on DHCP on the Wingate server).
So, I guess the scenario I'm trying to setup is that the current DHCP stays active, and all the client computers in my school connect through the Wingate server, however, the Wingate server is not the gateway.
I hope that my explanation wasn't too confusing, but I'm just trying to find out if the way I want to set it up is even possible, and let me know if there are any questions. I've already been chewed out about the bandwidth usage, and want to make sure these students stay on task by staying on the websites there are supposed to be on, and not browsing Youtube for 6 hours a day.
Thanks for taking the time to help me out.
- Greg