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09-01-2015 07:08 AM
Hi there,
Here comes the time to design my first NAT64 solution !
I have read few documents from Palo Alto, but can't get one simple information...
Could anyone tell me the NAT64 table size for PA5060 ?
Best Regards,
Emmanuel
09-01-2015 09:50 AM - edited 09-01-2015 09:55 AM
Check the command
show system state | match nat
https://www.paloaltonetworks.com/documentation/61/pan-os/pan-os/networking/nat.html
09-02-2015 02:23 AM
Hello,
Thank you for your interet on my post.
However I can't find the answer with your command, because I'm looking for a system table maximum size and not for a policy number information :
xxxx(active)> show system state | match nat
cfg.general.max-di-nat-policy-rule: 8000
cfg.general.max-dip-nat-policy-rule: 450
cfg.general.max-nat-policy-rule: 8000
cfg.general.max-si-nat-policy-rule: 8000
cfg.general.max-signature: 6000
cfg.general.max-threat-signature: 3000
<output suppressed>
cfg.nat.max-range-per-ip: 8
peer.cfg.general.max-di-nat-policy-rule: 8000
peer.cfg.general.max-dip-nat-policy-rule: 450
peer.cfg.general.max-nat-policy-rule: 8000
peer.cfg.general.max-si-nat-policy-rule: 8000
peer.cfg.general.max-signature: 6000
peer.cfg.general.max-threat-signature: 3000
<output suppressed>
peer.cfg.nat.max-range-per-ip: 8
peer.sw.mprelay.s1.cp.nat_rpt: 0x0
peer.sw.mprelay.s1.dp0.nat_rpt: 0x1
peer.sw.mprelay.s1.dp1.nat_rpt: 0x1
peer.sw.mprelay.s1.dp2.nat_rpt: 0x1
sw.mprelay.s1.cp.nat_rpt: 0x0
sw.mprelay.s1.dp0.nat_rpt: 0x1
sw.mprelay.s1.dp1.nat_rpt: 0x1
sw.mprelay.s1.dp2.nat_rpt: 0x1
Could anybody help ?
Best Regards
Emmanuel
09-02-2015 05:24 AM
Hi Emmanuel,
Have you checked the document that I have attched in the previous comment?
Regards,
Pankaj Kumar
09-02-2015 06:15 AM
Hi Pankaj,
I checked your link and cannot get the information I need.
The link is great for capacity planning or monitoring, but not to design a solution.
Rule Used Available
-------------------------------- ---------- ----------
NAT 0 516096
So this rule could use 516096MB of memory, fine... but what is the memory usage of a NAT 64 session ?
That's why I talked about table size and not memory pool.
Your answer is a brick on the wall, but I need the second part now 🙂
Or only an answer about the theorical maximum number of simultaneous NAT64 sessions running over a PA5060.
Don't hesitate to explain your answer if I misunderstood.
Best Regards,
Emmanuel
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