[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, Jan 09, 2008 at 11:36:41PM -0800, Joshua Penix wrote:
So if you stick another
router like your Netgear behind it, you do have a double-NAT situation
and yes you'll get a non-routable WAN address (and a host of other
screwy networking issues).
When you say non-routable do you mean you can't access it from the outside?
I've often wondered if multiple NAT firewalls would work.
As long as you got 1 machine
you want to talk to behind all those NAT firewalls you could make it work
right?
Multiple NAT works fine. You could pass through a nearly limitless
amount of NAT machines. You can even re-use publically routable
addresses in your own network behind a NAT network. The only problem
there is when you clash with the real machine (you to them, or them to
you). But that would be pretty rare, really. You prolly only communicate
with a VERY small portion of IP addresses available.
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