C-4
2 0 0 0 - A 2 - G B 2 1 - 1 0
visible from the Internet. When the Local Server is configured, the following
information must be entered:
•
Translated IP address
−
local IP address, as seen from the LAN.
•
Protocol
−
TCP, UDP, AH, ESP, or both UDP and TCP.
•
Translated Port Number
−
port number on which the local server sees the
service (UDP and TCP only).
•
Standard Port Number
−
port number on which the Internet sees the service
(UDP and TCP only).
For current port number assignments, please see http://www.iana.org/
assignments/port-numbers.
Note that TCP port 1723 is used to select Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol
(PPTP) and TCP port 1720 is used to select ViaVideo. When using ViaVideo
units through NAT, the following limitations apply.
•
Only one Via Video inside of NAT may accept calls.
•
All ViaVideo units in the network must be configured to use fixed ports 3230
−
3235.
•
All ViaVideo units inside of NAT must be configured to use NAT and must
have the IAD’s WAN address configured.
If Internet access of a local Telnet server at TCP port 23 is desired, it will be
necessary to reconfigure the Telnet server port of the IAD.
NAT Alias Configuration
A NAT Alias entry is used when the local device is assigned a unique IP
address from the WAN port of the IAD. The local device will be
totally
accessible from the Internet. When the Alias entry is configured, the
following information must be entered:
•
Local IP Address
−
the local IP address as seen from the LAN.
•
Internet IP Address
−
the IP address of the device as seen from the Internet.
When configuring a NAT Alias entry, the alias’s Internet IP address
must
also
be configured on the WAN port. This must be configured with an IP mask of
255.255.255.255 if the alias’s Internet IP address is on the same subnet as the
IAD’s WAN IP address. If the alias’s Internet IP address is on a subnet
different from the IAD’s WAN IP address, the proper subnet mask should be
used.
IP Filtering
IP Filtering controls IP traffic traveling through an interface by selectively
passing or discarding IP packets based on criteria expressed in the form of a
“filter.” A filter is simply as set of rules that determine whether a packet
should be passed or discarded as it crosses an interface. An interface is any
port that carries IP traffic. On the IAD, it can be on of the following: Ethernet
port, PPP connection, ATM PVC, or FR DLCI. IP filtering can selectively
pass or discard IP packets based on one or more of the following properties:
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