Re: Cannot Access calendar in mysite by Hollis
Hollis
Fri Dec 02 12:24:40 CST 2005
In article <17FBBA6A-0429-4286-8121-F2DA2FD3BCB1@microsoft.com>,
=?Utf-8?B?RGltYW4=?= wrote:
> No.
> I have a gateway(DSL modem router)
>
Well, that certainly is a shocker! It is like realizing you are
talking with a man who has unprotected sex out in the bar scene--he is
a dead man and doesn't even know it yet. A DSL modem router is not a
firewall device; and, unlike the man in the bar scene, the bad guys are
very adept at finding your system. Finally, it percolates through that
you are still in operation, so there must be some other protection in
your system. So, perhaps you should provide some more details about
your network, in addition to it being:
SBS 2003
no-ip service
sharepoint portal server 2003
Specifically, is the sharepoint portal server 2003 on a separate box?
If you have it on your SBS2003 box, you are in unsupported territory,
way off the map, and you can be having all kinds of problems. So, that
is probably not the case, and I will go on that assumption.
If you are not using ISA server, then not having edited the proxy
parameters into your web.config file is not the culprit--which is what
I expected.
When I first installed SPS on my box (a different box from the Small
Business Server), I couldn't access the admin pages--kept getting the
error message that I didn't have access rights to them. When I checked
the ISA logs, it was evident that the error message was coming from the
SBS box dns server. Well, that would be correct, because a request for
the SPS admin pages shouldn't be going to that box--particularly since
I was using IPAddress of 127.0.0.1. So I set up the dns server on my
SPS box, as a subsidiary server to the SBS dns server, and had it
handle the resolution of IP=127.0.0.1 on the SPS box. And the host
headers for my virtual servers, etc. So, I can access the Admin pages
now. You might want to do that for your SPS box also, though on would
think that putting the SBS box as the dns server in NIC TCP/IP
properties on your SPS box would be adequate. But, if the Exchange
server address isn't specifically listed as an alias in your SBS dns,
then it may not resolve.
All this is basic networking material, of which I am no expert. I just
know enough to get my boxes to talk to each other. You should take
your question to the public.Windows.Server.SBS newsgroup, because that
is where the real SBS experts hang-out. Be forewarned that Susan
Bradley and the 3 Magical M's, as well as others, will have a fit about
your security arrangement. And present the network information all in
one message, so they don't have to play 20 questions with you. Include
an ipconfig/all from the SBS server and from the SPS server at the end.
They will undoubtedly ask for that.
Hollis D. Paul [MVP - Outlook]
Hollis@outhousebythesound.com
Mukilteo, WA USA