Differences between server publishing rules and access rules in ISA Server 2004 (837863)



The information in this article applies to:

  • Microsoft Internet Security and Acceleration Server 2004, Standard Edition
  • Microsoft Internet Security and Acceleration Server 2004, Enterprise Edition

INTRODUCTION

Microsoft Internet Security and Acceleration (ISA) Server 2004 is designed so that communication between different networks should traverse ISA Server. It is not intended that clients on a specific network should use ISA Server to access resources on the same network. This configuration is known as looping back through the ISA Server computer. You can provide access between internal clients on a specific network to resources on a different network in several ways.

Generally, you use access rules determine how clients on a source network access resources on a destination network. However, in some circumstances, it may be appropriate to configure internal client access by using a server publishing rule instead of using an access rule that permits access by using a specific protocol.

MORE INFORMATION

For information about how to use server publishing rules and access rules, for a comparison of how server publishing rules and access rules behave in a routed network relationship, and for a comparison of how server publishing rules behave in a network relationship with Network Access Translation (NAT) applied, visit the following Microsoft Technet Web site:

Configuring Internal Client Access to Internal Resources in ISA Server 2004http://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol/isa/2004/plan/internalclientaccess.mspx


Modification Type:MajorLast Reviewed:2/10/2006
Keywords:kbFirewall kbDeployment kbNAT kbhowto kbinfo KB837863 kbAudITPRO