Cisco OL-4015-08 User Manual page 403

Cisco router and security device manager user's guide
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Chapter 18
Network Address Translation
Note
Direction
Translate from Interface
Note
OL-4015-08
If you create a NAT rule that would translate addresses of devices that are part of
a VPN, SDM will prompt you to allow it to create a route map that protects those
addresses from being translated by NAT. If NAT is allowed to translate addresses
of devices on a VPN, their translated addresses will not match the IPSec rule used
in the IPSec policy, and traffic will be sent unencrypted. You can view route maps
created by SDM or created using the CLI by clicking the View Route Maps button
in the NAT window.
Select the traffic direction that this rule applies to.
From outside to inside
Select this option if you want to translate incoming addresses to addresses that
will be valid on your LAN. One situation in which you may want to do this is
when you are merging networks and must make one set of incoming addresses
compatible with an existing set on the LAN the router serves.
This help topic describes how the remaining fields are used when From outside to
inside is chosen.
This area shows the interfaces from which packets needing address translation
may arrive. It provides fields for you to specify the IP address of a single host, or
a network address and subnet mask that represent the hosts on a network.
Outside Interfaces
If you choose From outside to inside, this area contains the designated outside
interfaces.
If this area contains no interface names, close the Add Address Translation Rule
window, click Designate NAT interfaces in the NAT window, and designate the
router interfaces as inside or outside. Then return to this window and configure
the NAT rule.
Cisco Router and Security Device Manager Version 2.2 User's Guide
Network Address Translation Rules
18-21

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