Cisco Prime Network Reference Guide, 3.8
Using Carrier Grade NAT Commands

Table Of Contents

Using Cisco Carrier Grade NAT Commands

Supported Network Elements

Configuring Carrier Grade NAT Instance

Removing a Carrier Grade NAT instance

Displaying Pool Utilization

Adding 6rd Forwarding

Adding Carrier Grade Nat 64 Forwarding


Using Cisco Carrier Grade NAT Commands


Carrier Grade NAT is a large-scale Network Address Translation (NAT) that provides translation of millions of private IPv4 addresses to public IPv4 addresses. These translations support subscribers and content providers with a bandwidth throughput of at least 10 Gbps full-duplex.

Carrier Grade NAT addresses the IPv4 address completion problem. It employs Network Address and Port Translation (NAPT) to aggregate many private IPv4 addresses into fewer public IPv4 addresses. For example, a single public IPv4 address with a pool of 32,000 port numbers supports 320 individual private IP subscribers, assuming that each subscriber requires 100 ports. Carrier Grade NAT also offers a way to implement a graceful transition to IPv6 addresses.

Carrier Grade NAT attributes and instances are configured as a CRS-ADVSVC-PLIM card on Cisco CRS-1 routers. To route internal public addresses to external public addresses, a VPN Routing and Forwarding (VRF) instance is created. Interfaces are created for the VRF at the subscriber-side (private) and the Internet-side (public). The VRF enables static or dynamic routing of protocols on the interfaces.

Cisco Prime Network displays the following attributes in the logical inventory of the Cisco Prime Network Vision application:

Carrier Grade NAT Instance Name — The Carrier Grade NAT instance name identifies the Carrier Grade NAT instance. Cisco Prime Network supports the following instances for Carrier Grade NAT:

Stateful Address Translation- NAT44 Stateful

Stateless Address Translation- NAT 64 Stateless (X-LAT)

IPv6 rapid deployment (6rd)

Each Carrier Grade NAT instance has several attributes listed under them. The attributes are grouped under related categories. The categories and attributes are listed below:

Preferred Location

Preferred Location—Hyperlink to the card in physical inventory

Preferred Location—Alternate name for card location

Location Type—Configured type of location

Redundancy Status

Service Infra Interface—Hyperlink to routing entity in logical inventory

Address Pools

Inside VRF—Hyperlink to inside VRF in logical inventory

Outside VRF—Hyperlink to outside VRF in logical inventory

Address Pool—Range of IP Addresses for the instance

Address Family—Type of IP Address in this pool

Associated Interfaces

Interface—SVI service-related hyperlink entry to logical inventory

Statistics

Statistics Name

Statistics Value

Supported Network Elements

You can run the Carrier Grade NAT commands on the following network element:

Cisco CRS Series Routers

Cisco CRS series includes both the CRS-1 and CRS-3 Series Routers.

See Part 1—Cisco VNEs for details on the software versions Prime Network supports for these network elements. To run the Carrier Grade NAT commands, the software on the network element must support the Carrier Grade NAT technology.

Configuring Carrier Grade NAT Instance

Use the Add Static Port Forwarding command to add a Carrier Grade NAT instance to the device.


Step 1 In the inventory window, expand the Logical Inventory tree and Carrier Grade NAT node.

Step 2 Right-click any Carrier Grade NAT instance and choose Commands > Configure > Static Port Forwarding.

The Static Port Forwarding dialog box opens.

Step 3 By default, the General tab is selected. Enter values for the following parameters.

.

Input Parameter
Description

Carrier Grade NAT Instance Name

Name of the Carrier Grade NAT instance.

Inside VRF Name

Name of the inside VPN routing and forwarding (VRF).

CGN Instance Name

Name of the CGN instance added under each Carrier Grade NAT Instance Name.

Address Family

Name of the IP address family. The default and only value is IPv4.

Protocol

Name of the protocol session. The values are TCP, UDP, or ICMP. The default value is TCP.

Address

Address of the inside VRF.

Port Number

Port number for the inside VRF. The range is from 1 to 65535.


Step 4 To see the commands that will be applied on the device, click Preview.

You can view the commands in the Result tab. You can go back and make any required changes to the input parameters.

Step 5 To schedule the command, click the Scheduling tab. For more details on scheduling, see Scheduling a Command.

Step 6 To run the commands, click Execute Now.

The newly added Carrier Grade NAT instance appears in the Carrier Grade NAT tree. Any errors are displayed in the Result tab.

Step 7 To close the dialog box, click Close.


Removing a Carrier Grade NAT instance

Use the Static Port Forwarding command to remove a Carrier Grade NAT instance from the device.


Step 1 In the inventory window, expand the Logical Inventory tree and Carrier Grade NAT node.

Step 2 Right-click the Carrier Grade NAT instance that you want to remove and choose Commands > Delete > Static Port Forwarding.

Step 3 The Static Port Forwarding dialog box opens. By default, the General tab is selected.

Step 4 To see the commands that will be applied on the device, click Preview.

You can view the commands in the Result tab.

Step 5 To schedule the command, click the Scheduling tab. For more details on scheduling, see Scheduling a Command.

Step 6 To run the commands, click Execute Now.

The Carrier Grade NAT instance is no longer visible under the Carrier Grade NAT tree. Any errors are displayed in the Result tab.

Step 7 To close the dialog box, click Close.


Displaying Pool Utilization

Use the Pool Utilization command to view the ports that the Carrier Grade NAT instances use in the given address range.


Step 1 In the inventory window, expand the Logical Inventory tree and Carrier Grade NAT node.

Step 2 Right-click the Carrier Grade NAT instance and choose Commands > Show > Pool Utilization.

The Pool Utilization dialog box opens.

Step 3 By default, the General tab is selected. Enter values for the following parameters.

Input Parameter
Description

CGN Instance Name

Name of the CGN instance.

Inside VRF Name

Name of the inside VRF.

Start Address

Starting IPv4 address in the range.

End Address

Ending IPv4 address in the range.


Step 4 To see the commands that will be applied on the device, click Preview.

You can view the commands in the Result tab. You can go back and make any required changes to the input parameters.

Step 5 To schedule the command, click the Scheduling tab. For more details on scheduling, see Scheduling a Command.

Step 6 To run the commands, click Execute Now.

Any errors are displayed in the Result tab.

Step 7 To close the dialog box, click Close.


Adding 6rd Forwarding

Use the Add 6rd Forwarding command to add a 6rd forwarding.


Step 1 In the inventory window, expand the Logical Inventory tree and Carrier Grade NAT node.

Step 2 Right-click the Carrier Grade NAT instance and choose Commands > Configure > Static Port Forwarding.

The Add 6rd Forwarding dialog box opens.

Step 3 By default, the General tab is selected. Enter values for the following parameters.

Input Parameter
Description

CGN Instance Name

Name of the CGN instance.

6rd Name

Name of the 6rd instance.

ServiceAppipv4

Name of serviceApp Ipv4 interface.

ServiceAppipv6

Name of serviceApp Ipv6 interface.


Step 4 To see the commands that will be applied on the device, click Preview.

You can view the commands in the Result tab. You can go back and make any required changes to the input parameters.

Step 5 To schedule the command, click the Scheduling tab. For more details on scheduling, see Scheduling a Command.

Step 6 To run the commands, click Execute Now.

Any errors are displayed in the Result tab.

Step 7 To close the dialog box, click Close.


Adding Carrier Grade Nat 64 Forwarding

Use the Add Nat 64 Forwarding command to add a 6rd forwarding.


Step 1 In the inventory window, expand the Logical Inventory tree and Carrier Grade NAT node.

Step 2 Right-click the Carrier Grade NAT instance and choose Commands > Configure > Static Port Forwarding.

The Add 6rd Forwarding dialog box opens.

Step 3 By default, the General tab is selected. Enter values for the following parameters.

Input Parameter
Description

CGN Instance Name

Name of the CGN instance.

Nat 64 Name

Name of the Nat 64 instance.

ServiceAppipv4

Name of serviceApp Ipv4 interface.

ServiceAppipv6

Name of serviceApp Ipv6 interface.


Step 4 To see the commands that will be applied on the device, click Preview.

You can view the commands in the Result tab. You can go back and make any required changes to the input parameters.

Step 5 To schedule the command, click the Scheduling tab. For more details on scheduling, see Scheduling a Command.

Step 6 To run the commands, click Execute Now.

Any errors are displayed in the Result tab.

Step 7 To close the dialog box, click Close.