02-13-2009 11:26 PM - last edited on 03-25-2019 03:22 PM by ciscomoderator
I am trying to NAT my inside local address to outside global. MUST I assign an address from the inside global to an interface before it works?
02-14-2009 11:11 AM
Hi Just,
I think you are mixing concepts here.
The inside local address is the private ip address of a host inside your network.
The outside global address is the public ip address of a target host on the outside network, e.g. on the Internet.
I suppose you wanted to translate the inside local address to an inside global address.
The inside global address is a public ip address that your company was assigned to use on the Internet.
For translation from inside local to inside global you can use the ip address of the interface on which you configured "ip nat outside", or you can use a different public ip address.
The key is that your ISP must be able to route packets to that public ip address (to your inside global address).
Cheers:
Istvan
02-15-2009 10:13 PM
I understand, please my question is must I assign one of the inside global to an (outside)interface before it works.
02-15-2009 10:31 PM
Hi
The interface, which you are connecting to the global Network, should be configured with the Global IP address (outside)and private IP should be NAT through this device only.
You know better about your network connectivity
02-16-2009 02:50 AM
No, not necessarily.
02-16-2009 04:53 AM
Hi Bevilacqua,
No for interface IP or NAT (or BOTH)
If you do not mind, please throw some light how it will work? (Connecting to global network with private IP) is I missing out any thing!
02-16-2009 05:01 AM
I do not understand your question. If it is unrelated to the question here, open a new thread and explain.
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