Lines Matching defs:NAT
1177 \item \verb|nat| --- a special NAT route. Destinations covered by the prefix
1180 are selected with the attribute \verb|via|. More about NAT is
1181 in Appendix~\ref{ROUTE-NAT}, p.\pageref{ROUTE-NAT}.
1262 For NAT routes it is the first address of the block of translated IP destinations.
2032 table. NAT and masquerading rules have an attribute to select new IP
2050 of the IP packet into some other value. More about NAT is
2051 in Appendix~\ref{ROUTE-NAT}, p.\pageref{ROUTE-NAT}.
2126 The \verb|ADDRESS| may be either the start of the block of NAT addresses
2127 (selected by NAT routes) or in linux-2.2 a local host address (or even zero).
2130 More about NAT is in Appendix~\ref{ROUTE-NAT},
2131 p.\pageref{ROUTE-NAT}.
2193 If the rule does NAT (f.e.\ rule \#320), it is shown by the keyword
2828 \section{Route NAT status}
2829 \label{ROUTE-NAT}
2831 NAT (or ``Network Address Translation'') remaps some parts
2832 of the IP address space into other ones. Linux-2.2 route NAT is supposed
2841 Route NAT is {\em stateless\/}. It does not hold any state
2849 several servers with NAT. This is a mistake. All you get from this
2861 active FTP clients happy, your choice is not route NAT but masquerading,
2875 A great advantage of route NAT is that it may be used not
2884 states that the single address 192.203.80.144 is a dummy NAT address.
2910 is some NAT address, declared by {\tt ip route add nat}.
2919 NAT mechanism used in linux-2.4 is more flexible than