05-07-2010 08:56 PM - edited 03-06-2019 10:59 AM
hi experts,
i would like to know if all ports (i.e. 80, 25, 443, etc) are enabled by default when i use this command:
ip nat inside source static <localaddr> <globaladdr> extendable
could someone enlighten me or expound on the keyword "extendable" below:
"Extendable" static translations:
Solved! Go to Solution.
05-08-2010 12:34 AM
To answer you question:-
Yes - ALL ports are enabled.
The extendable keyword allows you to configure several ambiguous static translations, where an ambiguous translations are translations with the same local or global address. This option just allows you to "Extend" the translation beyond simple IP!
HTH>
05-08-2010 12:34 AM
To answer you question:-
Yes - ALL ports are enabled.
The extendable keyword allows you to configure several ambiguous static translations, where an ambiguous translations are translations with the same local or global address. This option just allows you to "Extend" the translation beyond simple IP!
HTH>
05-08-2010 02:46 AM
johnlloyd_13 wrote:
hi experts,
i would like to know if all ports (i.e. 80, 25, 443, etc) are enabled by default when i use this command:
ip nat inside source staticextendable could someone enlighten me or expound on the keyword "extendable" below:
"Extendable" static translations:
The extendable keyword allows the user to configure several ambiguous static translations, where an ambiguous translations are translations with the same local or global address.
John
As Andrew says it does indeed enable all ports but for a specific circumstance. If you simply want to enable all ports for a specific local to global address then you don't need the extendable keyword ie.
ip nat inside source static
would do the job.
Jon
05-13-2010 05:35 AM
thanks for your inputs! appreciate it!
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