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Unfortunately I don't think NAT will work (at least as my far as my
minimal understanding is). As I understand NAT, it allows you to map
individual IP addresses to another individual IP address. That is to
say map 192.168.0.1 to 1.2.3.5 and that is it. You can not map a block
of IP addresses (i.e. a complete local subnet) to a single IP address as
masqing does... Am I missing something about NAT that would allow me to
accomplish what I want?
Alan
"John D. Hardin" wrote:
>
> On Thu, 19 Aug 1999, Alan Izzo wrote:
>
> > However, in my perverse model I want to have each internal network
> > (192.168.0.x and 192.168.1.x in the picture) masq'ed to it's own
> > different global IP address that has been assigned by my cable modem
> > ISP
>
> What you want is called "NAT", for Network Address Translation.
> Masquerade is a type of NAT called many-to-one. You want one-to-one.
>
> Unfortunately I don't have any pointers handy. I'm sure someone else
> will pipe up with lots, or you could search using google.
>
> --
> John Hardin KA7OHZ [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> pgpk -a finger://gonzo.wolfenet.com/jhardin PGP key ID: 0x41EA94F5
> PGP key fingerprint: A3 0C 5B C2 EF 0D 2C E5 E9 BF C8 33 A7 A9 CE 76
>
--
Alan Izzo
High Beam Software, Inc.
E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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