From: Richard Dumoulin (richard.dumoulin@vanco.es)
Date: Thu Jul 15 2004 - 11:25:12 GMT-3
Actually this is called NAT on a stick. But after reading the book sample it
seems there is another way of doing it which is explained in the book.
I believe NAT on a stick is when you configure PBR. You redirect all locally
generated traffic to loopback (where u configured ip nat inside) and from
there goes to another interface where "ip nat outside" is configured.
This is how I did it on the sample and then discovered there was a more
effective way,
--Richard
-----Original Message-----
From: trouse@cisco.com [mailto:trouse@cisco.com]
Sent: jueves, 15 de julio de 2004 16:11
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: RE: CCIE Routing and Switching Practice Labs!!!
Can NAT BE USED FOR LOCALLY SOURCED TRAFFIC. DOES it not have to originate
on "ip nat inside" interface and exit on the "ip nat outside" interface. So
in case of RIP, I assume the routers were directly connected and the packets
would be locally sources. I dont understand a NAT solution to this
problems.
Please help? Thanks
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