RE: Nat ( inside) 1 0 0

From: Kaiser Anwar (kaiseranwar@sbcglobal.net)
Date: Thu Apr 01 2004 - 13:54:16 GMT-3


Hi Rob,
           I understand that works with the global command but that is for
outside which gets translated when traffic is going out, but what about
inside interface when we configure Nat (inside) 1 0 0 we are not giving a
network id. So lets say if we have one ip on outside which uses the global
command and one private ip on the inside Interface, What I am trying to
understand is that when the packet comes in the pix what inside ip is it
using. Or does it uses the whole network.
Thanks for your help

Kaiser Anwar
Network engineer
Cell: (847) 409-7261

 -----Original Message-----
From: Rob Laidlaw [mailto:laidlaw@consecro.com]
Sent: Thursday, April 01, 2004 10:42 AM
To: Kaiser Anwar
Subject: Re: Nat ( inside) 1 0 0

Nat's correspond to Global's. So this example being nat (xxx) 1 would
correspond to any global (xxx) 1. the nat just determines if the address
gets natted, and the global is what it gets natted too when it tries to go
out that interface. Hope this helps.

-Rob

----- Original Message -----
From: "Kaiser Anwar" <kaiseranwar@sbcglobal.net>
To: "Ccielab@Groupstudy. Com (E-mail)" <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Thursday, April 01, 2004 10:35 AM
Subject: Nat ( inside) 1 0 0

> HI,
> I was just little confused that how does this nat all command works in a
> pix firewall. Does this nat the inside interface or chooses one ip address
> randomly.
> Thanks in advance.
>
>
> Kaiser Anwar
> Network engineer
> Cell: (847) 409-7261
>
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