Oops, sorry, went too fast there But Cisco do teach people how to fix problems with router NATs:
http://ciscostudy.blogspot.com/2006_02_10_archive.html Regards Brian On 2009-11-11 21:29, Brian E Carpenter wrote: > On 2009-11-11 19:05, Roger Marquis wrote: >> Keith Moore wrote: >>>> Can you tell us what network gear passes SCTP without NAT but drops it >>>> when NAT is enabled, or is this a rhetorical argument? >>> any IP router. >> Any router? Router? When was the last time anyone implemented NAT on a >> router? NAT is a firewall technology, not a router technology. > > I'm not an expert on all products, but Google quickly found me this: > > http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/security/asa/asa80/asdm60/user/guide/fwmode.html > > "This chapter describes how the firewall works in each firewall mode. To set > the mode at the CLI, see the "Setting Transparent > or Routed Firewall Mode at the CLI" section on page 3-4. > > This chapter includes the following sections: > > •Routed Mode Overview > > •Transparent Mode Overview > > Routed Mode Overview > > In routed mode, the security appliance is considered to be a router hop in > the network. It can use OSPF or RIP (in single > context mode). Routed mode supports many interfaces. Each interface is on a > different subnet. You can share interfaces between > contexts. > > This section includes the following topics: > > •IP Routing Support ..." > > Brian > > _______________________________________________ nat66 mailing list [email protected] https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/nat66
