Siemens 4200 Series User Manual

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Router User’s Guide
 
Monitoring Network Health
 
NAT/NAPT Server 
Hosts located on a Local Area Network (LAN) are often required to use private IP addresses as opposed 
to public IP addresses. Private IP addresses, however, are not known on the public Wide Area Network 
(WAN). In order to expose LAN-side hosts assigned private IP addresses to the public WAN, the Router 
can be configured to use one of two methodologies: Network Address Translation (NAT) or Network 
Address Port Translation (NAPT). NAT can expose a single LAN-side host to the WAN; NAPT can 
expose multiple LAN-side hosts. NAT/NAPT functionality can be individually configured for each WAN 
connection.  
To configure NAT/NAPT functionality: 
1. Select Setup>NAT/NAPT from the left navigation pane of the Web interface. This displays the 
“NAT/NAPT Configuration” window showing the WAN Interface connections. 
 
2.  Select one of the following for the desired connection: 
•  NAT & NAPT Disabled 
Disable both NAT and NAPT in order, for example, to set up static routes assigned by your ISP. 
•  NAT Only Enabled 
Enable NAT and specify the destination IP address for incoming packets. Depending on your 
configuration, NAT is sometimes enabled by default.  
•  NAPT Only Enabled 
Use NAPT only to handle multiple addresses based on port forwarding rules. 
•  NAT&NAPT Enabled 
Some service providers support a concurrent NAT/NAPT. Under this configuration, a single WAN 
interface may support multiple NAT connections with each NAT connection again exposing a 
single LAN-side host through a single WAN-side public IP address. Through either NAT or NAPT, 
the Router ensures that the LAN-side host is known to the WAN side only through the public IP 
address of the Router’s WAN-side connection. The host’s actual private IP address remains 
unknown to any WAN-side hosts or servers. 
3. Click 
Apply when you have finished configuring all desired connections. 
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