
blog.oddbit.com/post/2023-02-19-vrf-and-nat
Preview meta tags from the blog.oddbit.com website.
Linked Hostnames
14- 13 links toblog.oddbit.com
- 4 links togithub.com
- 1 link toarthurchiao.art
- 1 link todocs.kernel.org
- 1 link toen.wikipedia.org
- 1 link toexcalidraw.com
- 1 link tohachyderm.io
- 1 link tolore.kernel.org
Thumbnail

Search Engine Appearance
NAT between identical networks using VRF
Last week, Oskar Stenberg asked on Unix & Linux if it were possible to configure connectivity between two networks, both using the same address range, without involving network namespaces. That is, given this high level view of the network… …can we set things up so that hosts on the “inner” network can communicate with hosts on the “outer” network using the range 192.168.3.0/24, and similarly for communication in the other direction?
Bing
NAT between identical networks using VRF
Last week, Oskar Stenberg asked on Unix & Linux if it were possible to configure connectivity between two networks, both using the same address range, without involving network namespaces. That is, given this high level view of the network… …can we set things up so that hosts on the “inner” network can communicate with hosts on the “outer” network using the range 192.168.3.0/24, and similarly for communication in the other direction?
DuckDuckGo

NAT between identical networks using VRF
Last week, Oskar Stenberg asked on Unix & Linux if it were possible to configure connectivity between two networks, both using the same address range, without involving network namespaces. That is, given this high level view of the network… …can we set things up so that hosts on the “inner” network can communicate with hosts on the “outer” network using the range 192.168.3.0/24, and similarly for communication in the other direction?
General Meta Tags
8- titleNAT between identical networks using VRF :: blog.oddbit.com
- charsetutf-8
- viewportwidth=device-width,initial-scale=1
- descriptionLast week, Oskar Stenberg asked on Unix & Linux if it were possible to configure connectivity between two networks, both using the same address range, without involving network namespaces. That is, given this high level view of the network… …can we set things up so that hosts on the “inner” network can communicate with hosts on the “outer” network using the range 192.168.3.0/24, and similarly for communication in the other direction?
- keywords
Open Graph Meta Tags
9- og:localeen
- og:typearticle
- og:titleNAT between identical networks using VRF
- og:descriptionLast week, Oskar Stenberg asked on Unix & Linux if it were possible to configure connectivity between two networks, both using the same address range, without involving network namespaces. That is, given this high level view of the network… …can we set things up so that hosts on the “inner” network can communicate with hosts on the “outer” network using the range 192.168.3.0/24, and similarly for communication in the other direction?
- og:urlhttps://blog.oddbit.com/post/2023-02-19-vrf-and-nat/
Twitter Meta Tags
1- twitter:cardsummary
Link Tags
5- apple-touch-iconhttps://blog.oddbit.com/img/theme-colors/orange.png
- canonicalhttps://blog.oddbit.com/post/2023-02-19-vrf-and-nat/
- shortcut iconhttps://blog.oddbit.com/img/theme-colors/orange.png
- stylesheethttps://blog.oddbit.com/styles.css
- stylesheethttps://blog.oddbit.com/style.css
Links
29- https://arthurchiao.art/blog/conntrack-design-and-implementation
- https://blog.oddbit.com
- https://blog.oddbit.com/archive
- https://blog.oddbit.com/post/2023-02-19-vrf-and-nat
- https://blog.oddbit.com/post/2023-02-19-vrf-and-nat/the-problem.svg