--On Dienstag, 15. Juni 2004 23:26 -0400 Ray <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Since we've always used Office Mode, I never have understood or used "IP
Pool NAT" and I'm not really sure what it does. There's no way I can have

I guess you found the answer to this on your own. ;-)

It replaces the source address of all SR/SC packets to a dynamically
assigned address out of the pool. The assignment is done after
authentication.

If I'm reading this right, the network I'm using for IP Pool NAT must be
able to be routed on its own between the B gateway and the X network.

Yup, this is right.

Is there any way to add a NAT rule so that the IP Pool NAT network on B
can
use Hide NAT so that it appears to be B's external IP address to our
internal network?

I guess that this should work. Just create a NAT rule which hides the Pool NAT network behind any address which is being routed back to B. Be it either the gateway's or a different one (proxy-ARPed on B or routed back to B).

good luck

Joachim Bassmann, DELOS AG, Stuttgart, Germany
------------------------------------------------------------
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und das Internet geschlossen ist, werdet Ihr merken, da� Ihr Eure Kinder
doch erziehen m�sst. - [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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