Network Address Translation
What
is Network Address Translation?
- Network Address Translation (NAT) is the process where a network
device, usually a firewall, assigns a public address to a computer (or group of
computers) inside a private network.
- The
main use of NAT is to limit the number of public IP addresses an organization
or company must use, for both economy and security purposes.
- The most common form of network
translation involves a large private network using addresses in a private range
(10.0.0.0 to 10.255.255.255, 172.16.0.0 to 172.31.255.255, or 192.168.0 0 to
192.168.255.255).
- The private addressing scheme works well
for computers that only have to access resources inside the network, like
workstations needing access to file servers and printers. Routers inside the
private network can route traffic between private addresses with no trouble.
- However, to access resources outside the
network, like the Internet, these computers have to have a public address in
order for responses to their requests to return to them.
- This is where NAT comes into play.
- Internet requests that require Network
Address Translation (NAT) are quite complex but happen so rapidly that the end
user rarely knows it has occurred.
- A workstation inside a network makes a
request to a computer on the Internet.
- Routers within the network recognize that
the request is not for a resource inside the network, so they send the request
to the firewall.
- The firewall sees the request from the
computer with the internal IP.
- It then makes the same request to the
Internet using its own public address, and returns the response from the
Internet resource to the computer inside the private network.
- From the perspective of the resource on
the Internet, it is sending information to the address of the firewall.
- From the perspective of the workstation,
it appears that communication is directly with the site on the Internet. When
NAT is used in this way, all users inside the private network access the
Internet have the same public IP address when they use the Internet. That means
only one public addresses is needed for hundreds or even thousands of users.
- Most modern firewalls are stateful - that
is, they are able to set up the connection between the internal workstation and
the Internet resource.
- They can keep track of the details of the
connection, like ports, packet order, and the IP addresses involved.
- This is called keeping track of the state
of the connection.
- In this way, they are able to keep track
of the session composed of communication between the workstation and the
firewall, and the firewall with the Internet.
- When the session ends, the firewall discards
all of the information about the connection.
- There are other uses for Network Address
Translation (NAT) beyond simply allowing workstations with internal IP
addresses to access the Internet.
- In large networks, some servers may act as
Web servers and require access from the Internet.
- These servers are assigned public IP
addresses on the firewall, allowing the public to access the servers only
through that IP address.
- However, as an additional layer of
security, the firewall acts as the intermediary between the outside world and
the protected internal network.
- Additional rules can be added, including
which ports can be accessed at that IP address. Using NAT in this way allows
network engineers to more efficiently route internal network traffic to the
same resources, and allow access to more ports, while restricting access at the
firewall.
- It also allows detailed logging of
communications between the network and the outside world.
- Additionally, NAT can be used to allow
selective access to the outside of the network, too.
- Workstations or other computers requiring
special access outside the network can be assigned specific external IPs using
NAT, allowing them to communicate with computers and applications that require
a unique public IP address.
- Again, the firewall acts as the
intermediary, and can control the session in both directions, restricting port
access and protocols.
- NAT is a very important aspect of firewall
security.
- It conserves the number of public
addresses used within an organization, and it allows for stricter control of
access to resources on both sides of the firewall.
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