From: Carlos G Mendioroz (tron@huapi.ba.ar)
Date: Mon Sep 27 2004 - 18:55:15 GMT-3
I stand corrected, the parameter is for being able to map more than one
global addresses to the one local address. Sorry for fast (and wrong)
answer.
Still, let me know what no-alias if good for! :-)
Carlos G Mendioroz wrote:
> AFAIK, this lets the router use the same IP address for dynamic NAT on
> other ports.
> The one, somehow related, parameter I have been unable to understand is
> noalias. This would indicate the router not to "alias" its ethernet
> address to the global IP (ARP), but I fail to understand how will it get
> the traffic then...
>
>
> Drew Whitaker escribis:
>
>> Can someone explain to me the use of the keyword 'extendable' at the
>> end of NAT statements? Cisco's web site says it is used for
>> 'ambiguous' translations which, pardon the pun, is a bit ambiguous.
>>
>> The example I'm looking at is the final configuration or R3 in the
>> CCIE Routing and Switching Practice Labs (Cisco Press) lab #1, section
>> 2.1:
>> ip nat outside source static udp 172.16.0.1 520 224.0.0.9 520 extendable
>>
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>
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-- Carlos G Mendioroz <tron@huapi.ba.ar> LW7 EQI Argentina
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