C o n f i g u r a t i o n
4-69
Since Multicast packets are forwarded according to the preceding information,
this table is the key for IP Multicasting.
Show PIM Neighbor
1
Type
“N”
on the Multicast Configuration menu to display the PIM
Neighbor. The IAD displays the neighbor for each interface and its
expiration times.
2
Press any key to continue.
NAT Configuration
This section describes the steps required to configure Network Address
Translation (NAT).
NAT multiplexes traffic from the internal network and presents it to the
Internet as if it is from a single source that has only one IP address.
The NAT Local Server may be configured with a range of both TCP and
UDP ports, which benefits applications including video conferencing and
multi-user games.
Setting up IP networks without NAT may be complex—each requires an IP
address, subnet mask, a DNS address and a default router.
NAT reduces this complexity by
•
Modifying IP addresses and checksum without affecting traffic
•
Automatic network configuration when using DHCP
•
Packet-level filtering and routing
•
Traffic logging
NOTICE:
If you enter an element of NAT information incorrectly, the network
connection will not function and there may be no indication of what is
wrong.
Refer to the NAT Application Note in
Appendix C
for further information.
RPF Neighbor
IP address of the upstream PIM neighbor.
Outgoing Interfaces
List of the outgoing interfaces to which the multicast packet
will forward.
Pruned
If an outgoing interface is Pruned, this means that the interface
received a PIM Prune message.
Field
Description
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