Server and a Remote Web Server (IIS) in a DMZ Network

A DMZ (demilitarized zone) refers to an area of a network, usually between two firewalls, where users from the Internet are permitted limited access over a defined set of network ports and to pre-defined servers or hosts. A DMZ is used as a boundary between the Internet and your company's internal network. The network DMZ is the only place on a corporate network where Internet users and internal users are allowed at the same time.

In a DMZ setup, the web server (IIS) and the Desigo CC server are hosted on separate machines that are on different networks, separated by firewalls.

In such a scenario, commercial SSL certificates are typically used for the web site on IIS. For verifying the signature of the Windows App client, the same certificate or a separate commercial or self-signed certificate, may be used. However, you can use the same certificate if the private key used to secure the web site is exportable.

The following section describes a typical deployment scenario for setting up a Desigo CC system with a remote web server (IIS) in a DMZ scenario.

Server Station

A single dedicated workstation with the following features:

Remote Web Server (IIS) Station in a DMZ

Security

Deployment Diagram

Remote Web Server in a DMZ Scenario
Remote Web Server in a DMZ Scenario