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NAT

NAT. CST 415. Topics. Problem Definition NAT Types NAT Addressing Dynamic NAT Overloading. Problem Definition. N etwork A ddress T ranslation IPv4 addresses are becoming a rare commodity. What is a simple way to extend the life of IP addresses until IPv6 becomes fully implemented?

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NAT

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  1. NAT CST 415 CST 415 - Computer Networks

  2. Topics • Problem Definition • NAT Types • NAT Addressing • Dynamic NAT • Overloading CST 415 - Computer Networks

  3. Problem Definition Network Address Translation • IPv4 addresses are becoming a rare commodity. • What is a simple way to extend the life of IP addresses until IPv6 becomes fully implemented? Given a single IP address, map this single IP address onto multiple IP addresses. CST 415 - Computer Networks

  4. Problem Definition How can we get something for nothing? (e.g. How do we expand an address range without really adding more bits onto an address?) CST 415 - Computer Networks

  5. Problem Definition • The Internet sees a single point of presence – 161.82.35.22 • The private sees a single point of presence as the router – 192.10.10.5 • The NAT device translates from private network to external network. CST 415 - Computer Networks

  6. NAT • Developed by Cisco • NAT is an intermediary, very much like the old days when you would call an operator to “patch” a call through to you. • To do this, all you needed to know is to dial “0”, then request the other party you wished to speak to. CST 415 - Computer Networks

  7. NAT • As opposed to standard IP routing, NAT modifies the source and destination IP address in the IP header. • This modification is done based on mapping algorithms and tables. CST 415 - Computer Networks

  8. NAT types Static NAT: Mapping an unregistered IP address to a registered IP address on a one-to-one basis. Particularly useful when a device needs to be accessible from outside the network. In static NAT, the computer with the IP address of 192.168.32.10 will always translate to 213.18.123.110. CST 415 - Computer Networks

  9. NAT types Dynamic NAT: Maps an unregistered IP address to a registered IP address from a group of registered IP addresses. In dynamic NAT, the computer with the IP address 192.168.32.10 will translate to the first available address in the range from 213.18.123.100 to 213.18.123.150. CST 415 - Computer Networks

  10. NAT types Overloading NAT: A form of dynamic NAT that maps multiple unregistered IP addresses to a single registered IP address by using different ports. This is known also as PAT (Port Address Translation), single address NAT or port-level multiplexed NAT. In overloading, each computer on the private network is translated to the same IP address (213.18.123.100), but with a different port number assignment. CST 415 - Computer Networks

  11. NAT types Overlapping NAT: When the IP addresses used on your internal network are registered IP addresses in use on another network. • The router must maintain a lookup table of these addresses so that it can intercept them and replace them with registered unique IP addresses. • The NAT router must translate the "internal" addresses to registered unique addresses as well as translate the "external" registered addresses to addresses that are unique to the private network. • This can be done either through static NAT or by using DNS and implementing dynamic NAT CST 415 - Computer Networks

  12. NAT types Overlapping NAT: The internal IP range (237.16.32.xx) is also a registered range used by another network. Therefore, the router is translating the addresses to avoid a potential conflict with another network. It will also translate the registered global IP addresses back to the unregistered local IP addresses when information is sent to the internal network. CST 415 - Computer Networks

  13. NAT Example The use of w1.x1.y1.z1 and w2.x2.y2.z2 represents valid public IP addresses as allocated by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) or an ISP. • If a private user at 192.168.0.10 uses a Web browser to connect to the Web server at w2.x2.y2.z2, the user's computer creates an IP packet with the following information: • Destination IP address: w2.x2.y2.z2 • Source IP address: 192.168.0.10 • Destination port: TCP port 80 • Source port: TCP port 1025 CST 415 - Computer Networks

  14. NAT Example The use of w1.x1.y1.z1 and w2.x2.y2.z2 represents valid public IP addresses as allocated by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) or an ISP. • This IP packet is then forwarded to the NAT protocol, which translates the addresses of the outgoing packet to the following: • Destination IP address: w2.x2.y2.z2 • Source IP address: w1.x1.y1.z1 • Destination port: TCP port 80 • Source port: TCP port 5000 CST 415 - Computer Networks

  15. NAT Example The use of w1.x1.y1.z1 and w2.x2.y2.z2 represents valid public IP addresses as allocated by the InternetAssigned Numbers Authority (IANA) or an ISP. • The NAT protocol keeps the mapping of {192.168.0.10, TCP 1025} to {w1.x1.y1.z1, TCP 5000} in a table. • The translated IP packet is sent over the Internet. The response is sent back and received by the NAT protocol. When received, the packet contains the following public address information: • Destination IP address: w1.x1.y1.z1 • Source IP address: w2.x2.y2.z2 • Destination port: TCP port 5000 • Source port: TCP port 80 CST 415 - Computer Networks

  16. NAT Example The use of w1.x1.y1.z1 and w2.x2.y2.z2 represents valid public IP addresses as allocated by the InternetAssigned Numbers Authority (IANA) or an ISP. • The NAT protocol checks its translation table and maps the public addresses to private addresses and forwards the packet to the computer at 192.168.0.10. The forwarded packet contains the following address information: • Destination IP address: 192.168.0.10 • Source IP address: w2.x2.y2.z2 • Destination port: TCP port 1025 • Source port: TCP port 80 CST 415 - Computer Networks

  17. NAT Example • For outgoing packets from the NAT protocol, the source IP address (a private address) is mapped to the ISP allocated address (a public address), and the TCP/UDP port numbers are mapped to a different TCP/UDP port number. • For incoming packets to the NAT protocol, the destination IP address (a public address) is mapped to the original intranet address (a private address), and the TCP/UDP port numbers are mapped back to their original TCP/UDP port numbers. CST 415 - Computer Networks

  18. NAT Example • Packets that contain the IP address only in the IP header are properly translated by NAT. Packets that contain the IP address within the IP payload may not be properly translated by NAT. CST 415 - Computer Networks

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