Network address translation, an
Internet standard that enables a local-area network (LAN) to use one set of IP
addresses for internal traffic and a second set of addresses for external
traffic. A NAT box located where the LAN meets the Internet makes all
necessary IP address translations.
NAT purposes:
- Provides a type of firewall by hiding internal IP addresses
- Enables a company to use more internal IP addresses. Since they're used internally only, there's no possibility of conflict with IP addresses used by other companies and organizations.
Port
Address Translation (PAT), is an extension to network address translation (NAT)
that permits multiple devices on a local area network (LAN) to be mapped to a
single public IP address.
The goal of PAT is to conserve IP addresses.
Most
home networks use PAT. In such a scenario, the Internet Service Provider (ISP)
assigns a single IP address to the home network's router.
When Computer X logs on the Internet, the router assigns the client a port number,
which is appended to the internal IP address. This, in effect, gives Computer X
a unique address. If Computer Z logs on the Internet at the same time, the
router assigns it the same local IP address with a different port number.
Although both computers are sharing the same public IP address and accessing
the Internet at the same time, the router knows exactly which computer to send
specific packets
to because each computer has a unique internal address.
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