On 10/03/2013 23:07, Michael Mol wrote:
>> All those examples you give are much like a bunch of home machines 
>> > sitting behind a NAT gateway onto the internet. That's actually OK
>> > and I reckon that is the intended use of NAT.
> I want to point out that that's only true if the home network has at
> least one public IP. If you've got NAT 4x4, you're kinda screwed.
> 
> (Alan will understand that, but for those unfamiliar with it, that
> basically means that if your home router is given an RFC1918 address by
> your ISP, port forwarding isn't going to do squat for you.)


I'm getting images of NATted traffic being NATted. My head just exploded.



-- 
Alan McKinnon
alan.mckin...@gmail.com


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