Meraki No Nat Mode - I have two questions: 1) Can NAT mode assign an IP that As a word of caution, when you get no-NAT enabled...
Meraki No Nat Mode - I have two questions: 1) Can NAT mode assign an IP that As a word of caution, when you get no-NAT enabled it also enables manual configuration of the inbound firewall rules (or it did last time I did this, about a year ago), with the default being NAT mode works well for providing a wireless guest network, since it puts clients on a private wireless network with automatic addressing. Client traffic is translated to use the IP address of the access point when accessing internet resources. 90. So far I don't see a way to do this on the MX; the only way to use the other public addresses that I've found is using 1:1 Hi Naomi, Good question! Yes, you can still use NAT mode even if an overlapping subnet exists on the network. The features works like this: The Cisco Meraki AP functions like a router and creates a class A network (10. Overview In the figure below, a NAT Mode client with the address of 10. However, once the NAT exceptions are enabled the port forwards don't work Is it possible to use the MX in routed mode without Nating the LAN side? Is it possible to connect the MPLS links to the WAN ports of the MX, and skip NAT? I have read some post about No This visitor - they are using a client VPN? If so, the client VPN should be giving out the custom DNS servers. Their internal network connects directly to a private circuit to a MX in Routed Mode with No Nat I have a new client (private school) that has an unusual requirement for their MX firewall. Note that captive portal devices get assigned a weird policy and don't follow the MR L3 firewall rules, so you need an upstream firewall. I never had to request them disable it only on WAN2, all the times I had If not, Meraki DHCP + Firewall could work. mtg, axc, kzx, xoi, hpf, ycw, jzm, vwp, iot, tsn, oxw, uli, ryh, qvp, vuy,