The Zeroeth Rule:
Start with a hostname that is an FQDN resolvable in public DNS to your public IP.
If you didn't do that, start over with a factory reset; it will save you hours and frustration.
In general, a packet arriving at an interface is handled only by one of the following, in order:
DNATs first, then VPNs and Proxies and, finally, manual Routes and Firewall rules.
Never create a Host/Network definition bound to a specific interface.
Always leave all definitions with 'Interface: >'.
The Zeroeth Rule:
Start with a hostname that is an FQDN resolvable in public DNS to your public IP.
If you didn't do that, start over with a factory reset; it will save you hours and frustration.
In general, a packet arriving at an interface is handled only by one of the following, in order:
DNATs first, then VPNs and Proxies and, finally, manual Routes and Firewall rules.
Never create a Host/Network definition bound to a specific interface.
Always leave all definitions with 'Interface: >'.
If you want to play with iptables, etc, this isn't the product for you...You nailed it Bob, its like saying I want to use windows but would like to configure everything via command line.