Re: Nat on a stick

From: Carlos G Mendioroz (tron@huapi.ba.ar)
Date: Wed May 05 2004 - 17:24:25 GMT-3


CMTS is managed by your ISP, and he is the one giving you the
192.168.2.0 "public" range, so it is ok they use whichever means (static
route) to route that.

The hypothesis is that 1 address is not enough, so you need the other
block. It is not possible to have 10.0.0.12 mapped as public whith only
one public address.

-Carlos

Dan wrote:

> Hello all,
>
> Studing for the labs I started reading the technological documents on
> the cisco site, and i crossed this one:
>
>
> http://www.cisco.com/en/US/partner/tech/tk648/tk361/technologies_tech_note09186a0080094430.shtml
>
>
> or for short:
>
> http://tinyurl.com/2yymr
>
> My question is how does CMTS router knows how to reach the 192.168.2.0
> network (nat global) (I assume I might have static route, but the
> router is not controlled by "me").
> And why not just use 192.168.1.0 for nat global address?
>
>
> Thanks,
> Dan
>

-- 
Carlos G Mendioroz  <tron@huapi.ba.ar>  LW7 EQI  Argentina


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