Chapter 9. IP Masquerade and Network Address Translation
You don’t have to have a good memory to remember a time when only large organizations could afford to have a number of computers networked together by a LAN. Today network technology has dropped so much in price that two things have happened. First, LANs are now commonplace, even in many household environments. Certainly many Linux users will have two or more computers connected by some Ethernet. Second, network resources, particularly IP addresses, are now a scarce resource, and while they used to be free, they are now being bought and sold.
Most people with a LAN will probably also want an Internet connection that every computer on the LAN can use. The IP routing rules are strict in how they deal with this situation. Traditional solutions to this problem would have involved requesting an IP network address, perhaps a class C address for small sites, assigning each host on the LAN an address from this network and using a router to connect the LAN to the Internet.
In a commercialized Internet environment, this is an expensive proposition. First, you’d be required to pay for the network addresses that are assigned to you. Second, you’d probably have to pay your Internet Service Provider for the privilege of having a suitable route to your network put in place so that the rest of the Internet knows how to reach you. This might still be practical for companies, but domestic installations don’t usually justify the cost.
Fortunately, ...
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