Multiple Network Address Translation 9-95In order to support this type of mapping, you define two address ranges. First, you define a public range whichcontains the first and last public address to be used and the way in which these addresses should be used(PAT, static, or dynamic). You then configure an address map which defines the private IP address or addressesto be used and which public range they should be mapped to. You add the address map to the list of addressmaps which are configured, creating a map list. The mappings in the map list are order-dependent and arecompared in order from the top of the list to the bottom. If a particular resource is not available, subordinatemappings can be defined that will redirect traffic.Supported trafficMultiNat supports the following IP protocols: PAT: TCP/UDP traffic which does not carry source or destination IP addresses or ports in the data stream(i.e., HTTP, Telnet, ‘r’ commands, tftp, NFS, NTP, SMTP, NNTP, etc.). Static NAT: All IP protocol traffic which does not carry or otherwise rely on the source or destination IPaddresses in the data stream. Dynamic NAT: All IP protocol traffic which does not carry or otherwise rely on the source or destination IPaddresses in the data stream.MultiNAT ConfigurationYou configure the MultiNAT features through the console menu: For a simple 1-to-many NAT configuration (classic NAT or PAT), use the Easy Setup Profile configuration,described below. For the more advanced features, such as server lists and dynamic NAT, follow the instructions in: IP setup, described on page 9-97 IP profile parameters, described on page 9-110