The new ones (at least mine anyway) does support a DMZ. It also supports
static routing subnets (public and/or private) in parallel, on the same
interfaces, with DHCP/NAT. It certainly is not a enterprise-class device,
but it is the most full-featured home-class device I have run across.
On Sat, 13 Nov 2004, Rob Wultsch wrote:
> My current piece of junk hides the LAN behind nat, which is all well
> and good but the darn things does not port forward or allow dmz
> correctly. A normal modem would work fine, however the older actiontec
> modems also where routers, so I am asking if they allow a dmz.
>
>
>>> Does the modem support DMZ? I intend to feed a modem into a 'real' router.
>>
>> If you are going to feed the modem into a "real" router, then it shouldn't
>> matter if it supports a DMZ since that will be the issue for the "real" router
>> to handle.
>>
>>
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--
~Jay
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