From: Carlos G Mendioroz (tron@huapi.ba.ar)
Date: Tue Jul 17 2007 - 18:31:10 ART
Yes indeed. This fills the bill indeed :)
Thanks!
Phillip McCollum @ 17/7/2007 17:13 GMT -0300 dixit:
> Looks like you need this:
>
> http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps6350/products_configuration_guide_chap
> ter09186a008044edab.html#wp1048744
>
> Enabling Syslog for Logging NAT Translations
>
> The logging of NAT translations can be enabled and disabled by way of the
> syslog command.
>
> Router(config)#ip nat log translations syslog
>
> Phillip
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
> Carlos G Mendioroz
> Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2007 1:54 PM
> To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
> Subject: OT: NAT session tracking ?
>
> Hi,
> I was surprised today by a sensible question: how can I track
> NAT sessions, in order to know who was using a given public
> IP address at a given time ?
>
> The scenario is a ISP that uses private addresses for some clients,
> and needs to be able to track who was involved in past activity
> (like spamming, attacks, etc.)
>
> I would have asumed something was there to do this, but I was unable to
> locate anything. I was looking for some SNMP trap that NAT could
> generate on new sessions (and discarded ones), or tacacs accounting,
> or radius, or...
>
> Any idea ?
>
-- Carlos G Mendioroz <tron@huapi.ba.ar> LW7 EQI Argentina
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Sat Aug 18 2007 - 08:17:41 ART