Unintended Consequences of NAT Deployments with Overlapping Address Space
RFC 5684, “Unintended Consequences of NAT Deployments with Overlapping Address Space”, is an Informational document published in February 2010 by P. Srisuresh, B. Ford. The canonical text is published by the RFC Editor.
Abstract
This document identifies two deployment scenarios that have arisen from the unconventional network topologies formed using Network Address Translator (NAT) devices. First, the simplicity of administering networks through the combination of NAT and DHCP has increasingly lead to the deployment of multi-level inter-connected private networks involving overlapping private IP address spaces. Second, the proliferation of private networks in enterprises, hotels and conferences, and the wide-spread use of Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) to access an enterprise intranet from remote locations has increasingly lead to overlapping private IP address space between remote and corporate networks. This document does not dismiss these unconventional scenarios as invalid, but recognizes them as real and offers recommendations to help ensure these deployments can function without a meltdown. This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is published for informational purposes.
What “Informational” means
Published for the general information of the community. It does not define an IETF standard and carries no standards-track status.
The canonical text of RFC 5684 is hosted at rfc-editor.org. Available in TXT,HTML.
- RFC 5683 Password-Authenticated Key Diffie-Hellman Exchange
- RFC 5687 GEOPRIV Layer 7 Location Configuration Protocol: Problem Statement and Requirements
- RFC 5688 A Session Initiation Protocol Media Feature Tag for MIME Application Subtypes
- RFC 5690 Adding Acknowledgement Congestion Control to TCP
- RFC 5669 The SEED Cipher Algorithm and Its Use with the Secure Real-Time Transport Protocol
- RFC 5667 Network File System Direct Data Placement
- RFC 5666 Remote Direct Memory Access Transport for Remote Procedure Call
- RFC 5665 IANA Considerations for Remote Procedure Call Network Identifiers and Universal Address Formats