D-Link DI-1162 Network Router User Manual


 
DI-1162/DI-1162M Remote Access Router
72
State –
This toggles
Enable
and
Disable
.
NAT Configuration
Network Address Translation (NAT) is a routing protocol that allows your network to become a
private
network
that is isolated from, yet connected to the Internet. It does this by changing the IP address of packets from a
global
IP address usable on the Internet to a
local
IP address usable on your private network (but not on the Internet) and
vice-versa.
NAT has two major benefits. First, NAT allows many users to access the Internet using a small number or even a
single global IP address. This can greatly reduce the costs associated with Internet access and also helps alleviate
the current shortage of Internet IP addresses. Secondly, the NAT process creates a firewall which hides your local
network from Internet users, providing a degree of security to your Internet connection.
To be successfully implemented, NAT should be used only when the majority of network traffic remains on the
local network. In cases where a large percentage of network traffic is destined for the Internet, NAT can adversely
affect the speed and performance of your Internet connection. Also, your network servers such as ftp servers, web
servers or mail servers will probably need to be assigned
static
NAT IP addresses so their IP addresses remain
consistent. This issue will be further discussed later.
Network Address Port Translation (NAPT) is a subset of NAT where many local IP addresses and their TCP/UDP
port numbers are translated to a single global IP address and it’s TCP/UDP port number. In this document, the
term NAT will refer to both NAT and NAPT unless otherwise stated.
NAT can work in conjunction with DHCP. Thus, if both are enabled and properly configured, the DHCP server in
the DI-1162/DI-1162M will assign local IP addresses to computers on your network.
How NAT Works
In the most common NAT configuration, your network uses local IP addresses that are not valid on the Internet.
Internet (global) IP addresses are unique, with no two devices have the same IP address. The local IP addresses
can be freely assigned to computers on your network by your network administrator (within guidelines defined
later in this chapter and in “
Appendix C, IP Concepts”
). This can be done manually or by using DHCP. The WAN
port on the router is assigned a globally unique IP Address that IS valid on the Internet, since it will be sending and
receiving data directly to the Internet and is therefore part of it. Please study the example diagram below carefully.