کد:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/tech/tk648/tk361/technologies_configuration_example09186a00808d2b72.shtml
Document ID: 99427


Contents

Introduction
Prerequisites
Requirements
Components Used
Conventions
Configure
Network Diagram
Configurations
Verify
Troubleshoot
Related Information
Introduction

This document describes a configuration for a Cisco IOS® router to connect a network to the Internet with Network Address Translation through two ISP connections. The Cisco IOS Software Network Address Translation (NAT) can distribute subsequent TCP connections and UDP sessions over multiple network connections if equal-cost routes to a given destination are available. In the event that one of the connections becomes unusable, object-tracking, a component of Optimized Edge Routing (OER), can be used to deactivate the route until the connection becomes available again, which assures network availability in spite of instability or unreliability of an Internet connection.

Prerequisites

Requirements

This document assumes that you have functional LAN and WAN connections; it does not provide configuration or troubleshooting background to establish initial connectivity.

  1. This document does not describe a way to differentiate between the routes, so there is no way to prefer a more-desirable connection over a less-desirable connection.
  2. This document describes the configuration of OER to enable or disable either Internet route based on the reachability of the DNS servers of the ISP. You need to identify specific hosts that can be reachable through only one of the ISP connections and cannot be available if that ISP connection is not available.

Components Used

This configuration was developed with a Cisco 1811 router with 12.4(15)T Advanced IP Services software. If a different software version is used, some features are potentially not available, or the configuration commands can differ from those shown in this document. Similar configuration are available on all Cisco IOS router platforms although the interface configuration likely varies between different platforms.
The information in this document was created from the devices in a specific lab environment. All of the devices used in this document started with a cleared (default) configuration. If your network is live, make sure that you understand the potential impact of any command.
Conventions

Refer to Cisco Technical Tips Conventions for more information on document conventions.
Configure

You potentially need to add policy-based routing for specific traffic to ensure that it always uses one ISP connection. Examples of traffic that require this behavior include IPSec VPN clients, VoIP handsets, and any other traffic that use only one of the ISP-connection options to prefer the same IP address, higher speed, or lower latency on the connection.
Note: Use the Command Lookup Tool (registered customers only) to find more information on the commands used in this document.
Network Diagram

This document uses this network setup:

Configurations

This configuration example, as illustrated in the network diagram, describes an access router that uses a DHCP-configured IP connection to one ISP (as shown by FastEthernet 0), and a PPPoE connection over the other ISP connection. The connection types have no particular impact on the configuration unless object-tracking and OER and/or policy-based routing is to be used with a DHCP-assigned Internet connection. In these cases, it can be very difficult to define a next-hop router for policy routing or OER.
Router Configuration Example
track timer interface 5
!
! Configure timers on route tracking
!
track 123 rtr 1 reachability
delay down 15 up 10
!
track 345 rtr 2 reachability
delay down 15 up 10
!
! Use “ip dhcp client route track [number]”
! to monitor route on DHCP interfaces
! Define ISP-facing interfaces with “ip nat outside”
!
interface FastEthernet0
ip address dhcp
ip dhcp client route track 345
ip nat outside
ip virtual-reassembly
!
interface FastEthernet1
no ip address
pppoe enable
no cdp enable
!
interface FastEthernet2
no cdp enable
!
interface FastEthernet3
no cdp enable
!
interface FastEthernet4
no cdp enable
!
interface FastEthernet5
no cdp enable
!
interface FastEthernet6
no cdp enable
!
interface FastEthernet7
no cdp enable
!
interface FastEthernet8
no cdp enable
!
interface FastEthernet9
no cdp enable
!
! Define LAN-facing interfaces with “ip nat inside”
!
interface Vlan1
description LAN Interface
ip address 192.168.108.1 255.255.255.0
ip nat inside
ip virtual-reassembly
ip tcp adjust-mss 1452
!
! Define ISP-facing interfaces with “ip nat outside”
!
Interface Dialer 0
description PPPoX dialer
ip address negotiated
ip nat outside
ip virtual-reassembly
ip tcp adjust-mss
!
ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 dialer 0 track 123
!
! Configure NAT overload (PAT) to use route-maps
!
ip nat inside source route-map fixed-nat
interface Dialer0 overload
ip nat inside source route-map dhcp-nat
interface FastEthernet0 overload
!
! Configure an OER tracking entry
! to monitor the first ISP connection
!
ip sla 1
icmp-echo 172.16.108.1 source-interface Dialer0
timeout 1000
threshold 40
frequency 3
!
! Configure a second OER tracking entry
! to monitor the second ISP connection
!
ip sla 2
icmp-echo 172.16.106.1 source-interface FastEthernet0
timeout 1000
threshold 40
frequency 3
!
! Set the SLA schedule and duration
!
ip sla schedule 1 life forever start-time now
ip sla schedule 2 life forever start-time now
!
! Define ACLs for traffic that
! will be NATed to the ISP connections
!
access-list 110 permit ip 192.168.108.0 0.0.0.255 any
!
! Route-maps associate NAT ACLs with NAT
! outside on the ISP-facing interfaces
!
route-map fixed-nat permit 10
match ip address 110
match interface Dialer0
!
route-map dhcp-nat permit 10
match ip address 110
match interface FastEthernet0

With DHCP-assigned route tracking:
DHCP-Assigned Route Tracking Configuration Example (Optional)
interface FastEthernet0
description Internet Intf
ip dhcp client route track 123
ip address dhcp
ip nat outside
ip virtual-reassembly
speed 100
full-duplex
no cdp enable

Verify

Use this section to confirm that your configuration works properly.
The Output Interpreter Tool (registered customers only) (OIT) supports certain show commands. Use the OIT to view an analysis of show command output.

  • show ip nat translation — Displays NAT activity between NAT inside hosts and NAT outside hosts. This command provides verification that inside hosts are translated to both NAT outside addresses.
    Router# sh ip nat tra
    Pro Inside global Inside local Outside local Outside global
    tcp 172.16.108.44:54486 192.168.108.3:54486 172.16.104.10:22 172.16.104.10:22
    tcp 172.16.106.42:49620 192.168.108.3:49620 172.16.102.11:80 172.16.102.11:80
    tcp 172.16.108.44:1623 192.168.108.4:1623 172.16.102.11:445 172.16.102.11:445
    Router#
  • show ip route — Verifies that multiple routes to the Internet are available.
    Router# sh ip route
    Codes: C - connected, S - static, R - RIP, M - mobile, B - BGP
    D - EIGRP, EX - EIGRP external, O - OSPF, IA - OSPF inter area
    N1 - OSPF NSSA external type 1, N2 - OSPF NSSA external type 2
    E1 - OSPF external type 1, E2 - OSPF external type 2
    i - IS-IS, su - IS-IS summary, L1 - IS-IS level-1,
    L2 - IS-IS level-2
    ia - IS-IS inter area, * - candidate default,
    U - per-user static route
    o - ODR, P - periodic downloaded static route

    Gateway of last resort is 172.16.108.1 to network 0.0.0.0

    C 192.168.108.0/24 is directly connected, Vlan1
    172.16.0.0/24 is subnetted, 2 subnets
    C 172.16.108.0 is directly connected,
    FastEthernet4
    C 172.16.106.0 is directly connected, Vlan106
    S* 0.0.0.0/0 [1/0] via 172.16.108.1
    [1/0] via 172.16.106.1
    Router#

Troubleshoot

After you configure the Cisco IOS router with NAT, if the connections do not work, be sure of these:

  • NAT is applied appropriately on outside and inside interfaces.
  • NAT configuration is complete, and ACLs reflect the traffic that must be NATed.
  • Multiple routes to the Internet/WAN are available.
  • If you use route tracking to be sure that the Internet connections are available, check the state of the route tracking.

Related Information






Updated: Nov 15, 2007




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