An administrator needs to identify which NAT policy is being used for internet traffic.
From the GUI of the firewall, how can the administrator identify which NAT policy is in use for a traffic flow?
An administrator needs to identify which NAT policy is being used for internet traffic.
From the GUI of the firewall, how can the administrator identify which NAT policy is in use for a traffic flow?
The administrator can identify which NAT policy is being used for internet traffic by navigating to the Monitor tab, clicking on Session Browser, and reviewing the session details. This method allows one to see the specific NAT policy name applied to a traffic flow. Other methods may show if NAT was applied or provide related information, but only the Session Browser explicitly shows the NAT policy in use for the traffic flow.
This question was on the exam.. Nov 2023
is this dump valid plz?
D is correct . From the Monitor tab, click Session Browser and review the session details. verified in lab
Answerd is D, if you go to monitor>Session Browser and see the details you can locate the NAT policy that the flow is matching. its the only way to see the NAT policy for a session log (only if active at the time) in the GUI.
The answer has to be D. The question states "which NAT policy is in use for a traffic flow." The question is asking how to determine the NAT policy in use and not determine if a NAT policy was used. The session browser is the only way to see the NAT policy name. Answer has to be D.
D is correct You can only see the the Nat rule name in session browser, the details in Monitor > traffic logs only shows the Source Nat IP/DST Nat IP/ Ports
D is correct
From Monitor > logs > traffic, you can see the effects of NAT (src and dst IPs+ports), and if NAT was applied (yes/no), but it really doesn't tell you which NAT rule was used. However it (B) seems to be the most correct answer.
We are looking for "wich" NAT policy is applied, D is the only correct answer as we are looking for a NAT policy name. From Monitor > Logs > Traffic you can only see if NAT was applied (or not) but you cannot see wich NAT policy was applied.
D. confirmed
C. Definitely wrong. D. works only if the session is currently active. A. As mentioned by Djedeen. B. Makes the most sense. I would go for B.
The answer has to be D. The question states "which NAT policy is in use for a traffic flow." The question is asking how to determine the NAT policy in use and not determine if a NAT policy was used. The session browser is the only way to see the NAT policy name. Answer has to be D.
re-thinking about it, you were right. Should go for D as well.