Which type of NAT is used where you translate multiple internal IP addresses to a single global, routable IP address?

Which type of NAT is used where you translate multiple internal IP addresses to a single global,
routable IP address?

Which type of NAT is used where you translate multiple internal IP addresses to a single global,
routable IP address?

A.
policy NAT

B.
dynamic PAT

C.
static NAT

D.
dynamic NAT

E.
policy PAT

Explanation:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/security/asa/asa82/configuration/guide/nat_dynamic.html
Task Flow for Configuring Dynamic NAT and PAT
Use the following guidelines to configure either Dynamic NAT or PAT:

•First configure a nat command, identifying the real addresses on a given interface that you want to
translate.
•Then configure a separate global command to specify the mapped addresses when exiting another
interface.
(In the case of PAT, this is one address.) Each nat command matches a global command by
comparing the NAT ID, a number that you assign to each command.
Note The configuration for dynamic NAT and PAT are almost identical; for NAT you specify a range of
mapped addresses, and for PAT you specify a single address.
Figure 29-9 shows a typical dynamic NAT scenario. Only translated hosts can create a NAT session,
and responding traffic is allowed back. The mapped address is dynamically assigned from a pool
defined by the global command.
Figure 29.9 Dynamic NAT

Figure 29-10 shows a typical dynamic PAT scenario. Only translated hosts can create a NAT session,
and responding traffic is allowed back. The mapped address defined by the global command is the
same for each translation, but the port is dynamically assigned.
Figure 29-10 Dynamic PAT



Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *