05-03-2010 10:46 PM - edited 03-04-2019 08:21 AM
Hi,
I have to integrte two customers networks
after a take over, but both networks are with overlapping IP address range, both
networks like to talk to each other for resource sharing while maintaining same IP addressing for some time.
And they need to use exinting arranements for Internet access also.
Any advice will be appreciated.
Regards
05-03-2010 11:16 PM
Hi,try this:
network A——network B
A uses 192.168.1.0/24
B uses 192.168.1.0/24
A PC in A using 192.168.1.10 wants to access 192.168.1.100 in B.
then,
Make a nat static entry in A:(arrow means the nat)
192.168.1.10 ——>172.16.1.10
and another nat static entry in B:
192.168.1.100——>172.16.1.100
When A accesses B,A accesses the B using 172.16.1.100 ,instead of 192.168.1.100.
The nat process in A will convert A'addresses to "network C"(172.16.1.0 ,for example),and when B applys A,B will use 172.16.1.10 a destination address.
Have a try!
05-03-2010 11:52 PM
End solution is change IP Addressing of one of network.
In this kind of environment, NAT will work out well (both in terms of manageability & load on your device) if number of NAT entries are not huge. But if every end point has communicate with each other then IP Address migration is recommended.
As for servers you have to do static NAT and endpoints can be PATed. Just start with NAT entries which are absolute necessity and in parallel work out a uniform IP Addressing plan for both locations.
** Will recommend you to kindly go through NAT operational details. Check for applications in your environment& how it works along with NAT
05-04-2010 12:12 AM
Thanks rajatsetia,
That is the exact plan, but your recommendation about application compatibility with NATing is a highlighted point.
Did anyone find a good example in Cisco docs, with a router combining two networks, any thoughts about size of the router for a 10Mbps WAN Ethernet link between two sites.
Thanks
05-04-2010 12:31 AM
Thanks rajatsetia,
That is the exact plan, but your recommendation about application compatibility with NATing is a highlighted point.
Did anyone find a good example in Cisco docs, with a router combining two networks, any thoughts about size of the router for a 10Mbps WAN Ethernet link between two sites.
Thanks
Hi,
Check out the below link in NAT in Overlapping Networks,Hope to Help !!
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/tech/tk648/tk361/technologies_tech_note09186a0080094e77.shtml#topic12
Ganesh.H
05-04-2010 03:09 AM
Not very up to date with router models available, but ISR 2800 series will suffice your requirement,decision about specific model depends on number of ports or slots you need depending on current/future requirement.
In my opinion approach should be - target a application and check application doc for NAT support.
Another aspect is - check how NAT works, then you analyse how your application works and check for any compatibility or operational glitch.
Input that you should look out in NAT operational guide -
- number of connections your device support
- any general NAT level limitation which is not related to specific protocol
But more important is to check application documentation and look out NAT support or any operational issue.
Regards,
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