Hmm, if I am understanding you correctly, this is only a problem if the user is
translating all machines to one public address.  I use NAT at home and every
one of my machines has its own static NAT map (if it needs one)...

later,
Scott

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> It is the rpc2's use of UDP and the need for a unique IP/port pair to
> be unique computer.  If you have only one client behind a NAT box, you
> can configure the NAT box to properly direct the rpc2 traffic to that
> one box, but if you want 2 or more clients, you loose.  The NAT box
> will have no clue to which client a UDP packet should be delivered.
> 

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