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John, I would think the best questions to start of asking are: 1) "What do you want to do?" 2) "What do you NEED to do?" 3) "What are you trying to do?" Generally those will shed the most light on what is going on. They will also help others guide you in giving advice. I take this is a remote site that will need to access at least the AS/400. If you are more specific on what the customer currently has, I'm sure many people here can guide you in a direction. Just for starters, last year I set up our Canadian office with an AT&T managed frame connection. I've been working with our French office this year constructing a network from scratch. France is going to be Ethernet, NT server, and WinNT/95 client. Canada already had a Novell network. We upgraded from DOS and Win3.1 to Win95 and install the TCP/IP stack that comes with Win95. We also switched over to Ethernet. The office needed green-screen and printing from the AS/400. All PC's were installed with Client Access for Win95/NT. We installed JetDirect cards in the HP lasers and we bought HP JetDirect EX's for the two Epson LQ-2550's (Invoices/Checks and Pickers). We have a managed AT&T frame connection. They supplied the routers and CSU's. I even requested a Cisco 2507 for the Canadian office because it has a 16-port hub integrated right into the router. They gave me a Class A address subneted as a Class C so I used that for my IP numbering in Canada. I have IP running on the AS/400 and have a dedicated Ethernet card for all WAN traffic. Simple! They can now access all IP services on the AS/400 as well as the rest of the network (HTTP, FTP, Telnet, SMTP, etc.). We will be switching them from cc:Mail to the IMAP4 server next month and it is not going to cost anything communication wise because the infrastructure is there. Do you need a firewall? That could be answered: Yes, No or Maybe. I guess that is up to the customer. Are they using AT&T's point-to-point frame network? I *personally* would say, "No". Are they going to use AT&T's VPN? I would lean more toward, "Yes". Currently I have my managed frame services front-ended by a Raptor firewall running on Solaris. At the time we got the frame line, we also got a PRI for a modem server and a T1 for the Internet so we made it where *all* outside communication goes through the firewall. If I was getting *just* the frame relay circuit, "hell no" would I have paid that much money for the Raptor solution ($25k for software & $17k for hardware). I would have just plugged the AS/400 Ethernet right into the back of the router going to Canada. If you want more detail; yes, I can provide more detail, just let me know. Danny Mc? John Luebben wrote: > I have a client who has presented me with the following scenario: > > An external source is upgrading their software from DOS base Win95(8). > > They are requiring an AT&T leased line using frame relay be connected to the >AS400 (V4R2). > They are also asking that my client provide the FRAD / DSU to link up the >line with the box as well as > have him provide some type of Win sockets. I am assuming a TCP/IP / FTP >process, but since I was not involved in the talks, I can't be sure. > > Not being up to speed on TCP/IP, sockets, or the connectivity involved, how >should I advise my client to proceed - up to and including finding resources >to point him to. > > Is a firewall required? > > I'm such a novice in this area, that even letting me know what questions need >to be asked will be of great assistance, even a description of the >resources(both consulting and literature) I should be looking for. > > Thanks for any assistance. > > John L. > > > +--- > | This is the Midrange System Mailing List! > | To submit a new message, send your mail to MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com. > | To subscribe to this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-SUB@midrange.com. > | To unsubscribe from this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-UNSUB@midrange.com. > | Questions should be directed to the list owner/operator: david@midrange.com > +--- +--- | This is the Midrange System Mailing List! | To submit a new message, send your mail to MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com. | To subscribe to this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-SUB@midrange.com. | To unsubscribe from this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-UNSUB@midrange.com. | Questions should be directed to the list owner/operator: david@midrange.com +---
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