From: Maljure, Sanjay (smaljure@xxxxxxxxx)
Date: Wed Jan 24 2001 - 17:13:16 GMT-3
Hi Brian
I did look at the documents describing the "overlapping with NAT " I
think what I am trying to do is exactly the same as the 'overlapping'
case except for the DNS part. And not having DNS should not really
matter.
None of the documents that I looked at gave a sample script for doing
this using static IP addresses. One document that I looked in to used
'inside source list..' and 'outside source list...' to do it as they
were translating entire subnets.
So I am thinking 'inside source static' and 'outside source static' will
do the trick for me.
What do you think?
Thanks
Sanjay Maljure
CCIE# 6286
Enterprise Systems Consultant
Ciber, Inc.
Tel - 732.225.1700
Fax - 732.225.1973
-----Original Message-----
From: Brian Hescock [mailto:bhescock@cisco.com]
Sent: Wednesday, January 24, 2001 2:51 PM
To: Maljure, Sanjay
Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: Destination NAT....
Sounds like you want to do NAT with overlapping ip addresses. Do a
search
on CCO on "NAT and overlapping"
Brian
On Wed, 24 Jan 2001, Maljure, Sanjay wrote:
>
> Hi
> I thought I knew this stuff but I am beginning to see these funny
gnomes
> flying around....so please help
> What I need to do:
>
> I have an IP packet
> SIP=10.190.9.20
> DIP=10.190.29.111
>
> I need to NAT this so that
>
> SIP=172.30.43.111
> DIP=172.31.21.112
>
> And all these IP addresses are fixed which means I got to do static
NAT
>
> I am using a 2500 with "full NAT" feature set
>
> NATing the source IP addresses can be done with "ip nat inside source
> static....."
> How do I take care of the destination IP address NATing? ("ip nat
> outside source static...." will work????)
>
> Thanks for your time
> Sanjay
>
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Thu Jun 13 2002 - 10:27:42 GMT-3