> From: Steven M. Bellovin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

> More precisely, any protocol that uses secondary connections, 
> the parameters of which are carried in-band in a secured 
> connection, can't easily be NATted.  The most obvious example 
> is FTP.  4217 notes that it only works through NAT if the 
> client is aware of the NAT's existence, and that there are 
> serious security issues even so.

This is a design choice in the protocol, one that I would see as a layering 
violation. Application layer protocols should not be talking about IP addresses.

In IPSEC the issue is rather more architectural and it is not really possible 
to do a work around without fundamentally changing the principles behind the 
protocol.

IPSEC is a Network layer protocol so dealling in the IP addresses is not a 
layer violation.

_______________________________________________
Ietf mailing list
[email protected]
https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf

Reply via email to