![]() Give it a static IP that isn't on your normal internal WAN, set the VLAN to something other than the default, point DNS and gateway to non-existant IP addresses. Give the Mac a static IP address, doesn't even have to be a real network. Traffic for Parallels should still flow (I think) but OS X traffic will get blocked.Ī simpler way without dealing with the firewall would be to black hole the Mac's DNS servers and Gateway. Set the Parallels network adapter to Bridged mode. ![]() Deny all outbound traffic on the interface. If you're really committed to your original plan, learn how to configure the OS X firewall from the command line. Or suck it up Wilder40, you're about to learn how to support a Mac on your network. If that's your organization's policy, and this is coming from a Mac fan who is a system administrator, tell the designer suck it up Buttercup, you're running Adobe Creative Cloud on a Windows computer. Wilder40 wrote:We cannot allow Apple Macs onto our network as they are not supported and we have no Apple knowledge - we can't ensure a secure network if we allow an OS to attach that we do not know or support.
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