> If you want to be part of the global address space and you are > behind a NAT box, get a PPP account outside your NAT box and > connect to it with TCP or SSH or SSL or UDP or HTTP or whatever > (see for example the use of PPP over telnet, in the www.ora.com > Turtle PPP book.) > > What IPv4 NAT issue doesn't that solve, if any? it doesn't provide any more global address space for all of the hosts that would like to run applications that require it. Keith
- solution to NAT and multihoming Jon Crowcroft
- Re: solution to NAT and multihoming Jon Crowcroft
- Re: solution to NAT and multihoming Kevin Farley
- Re: solution to NAT and multihoming Keith Moore
- RE: solution to NAT and multihoming Bernard Aboba
- Re: solution to NAT and multihoming Kevin Farley
- Re: solution to NAT and multihoming Keith Moore
- RE: solution to NAT and multihoming Larry Foore
- RE: solution to NAT and multihoming James P. Salsman
- Re: solution to NAT and multihoming Perry E. Metzger
- Keith Moore
