04-13-2007 08:17 AM - edited 03-03-2019 04:32 PM
I have two out side companys wonting to connect to our company. there ip address are the same 192.168.0.0 subnet I have tryed several type of NAT's can someone give me a nat that will work.
04-14-2007 09:49 AM
Hi
Pls be clear that NAT is a routing concept. Moreover,when creating a intranet, and when u are implementing private IPs, you do not deploy NAT.
What you need is bridging. Pls eleborate on your problem. Maybe we can design something for you.
Regards
JD
04-14-2007 09:53 AM
Hi
Mr. bmbreer, I don't find it at all funny. You need to understand that we are here to help our friends , who may be a CCIE, or does not know networking at all. Instead if you have given some suggestions or some links that would have helped the guy, or not have replied at all... that would have been more beneficial.
JD
04-14-2007 10:13 AM
Hi there,
Try this link "Using NAT in Overlapping Networks":
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/tech/tk648/tk361/technologies_configuration_example09186a0080093f30.shtml
This document demonstrates how you can use Network Address Translation (NAT) for overlapping networks. Overlapping networks result when you assign an IP address to a device on your network that is already legally owned and assigned to a different device on the Internet or outside network. Overlapping networks also result when two companies, both of whom use RFC 1918 (Private Addresses) IP addresses in their networks, merge. These two networks need to communicate, preferably without having to readdress all their devices.
Since both networks use the same address space, then the goal is to NAT both inside and outside in order to make them communicate with each other using another different 2 address spaces. This configuration is required at both sides (inversely).
HTH.
Best regards,
Mohammed Mahmoud.
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