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I am studying the TCP hole punching technique and have got some knowledge from this article: TCP_hole_punching. But I don't understand below part:

      Network Drawing
      Peer A ←→ Gateway A ← .. Network .. → Gateway B ←→ Peer B  

      Types of NAT
      The availability of the TCP-hole-punching technique depends 
      on the type ofcomputer port allocation used by the NAT. When 
      two peers, A and B, instantiate TCP   connections by binding 
      to local ports Pa and Pb, respectively, **they need to know 
      the remote  endpoint NAT port in order to make the connection**.

Here are some questions, could somebody help explain? Any help or suggestion will be greatly appreciated!!

Q1. Suppose we have a client app running behind NAT1 and a server app running behind NAT2. They will have messaging and file transfer communication. The pattern will be the server listens and accepts connection from the client. Do they need to use the TCP hole punching to keep the tcp connection work?

Q2. Is the TCP hole punching technique necessary only when it's peer to peer communication and both parties are connecting to each other (e.g., 2x CONNECT(), no LISTEN(), ACCEPT(), etc.)?

Q3. In the above text, what does it mean of "they need to know the remote endpoint NAT port in order to make the connection"? Why do they need to know the remote endpoint NAT port?Don't they only need to know the local port of the other machine?

For example, suppose the pair are (ClientA, publicIPA, LocalPortA), (ClientB, publicIPB, LocalPortB). If the ClientA wants to communicate with ClientB via TCP, it may do something like this:

         clientBAddr.port = LocalPortB;
         clientBAddr.ip = inet_addr(publicIPB);
         connect(fdA, clientBAddr,...);

why would it need to know information such as NATPortA and NATPortB? Is there any problem if the clientA and clientB don't care about the NATA and NATB?

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  • For Q3, ClientA needs to know NATPortB because that's the port it has to connect() to.
    – Celada
    Feb 23, 2013 at 1:22
  • @Celada , but for ClientA, the application will do it like this: { serveraddr.port = LocalPortB, serveraddr.ip = inet_addr(publicIPB), connect(serveraddr); } so why would it need NATPortB?
    – Wallace
    Feb 23, 2013 at 1:29
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    Connecting to LocalPortB won't work unless LocalPortB happens to be equal to NATPortB. If they are not equal, then this incoming TCP SYN packet will be dropped by the B side NAT box because it doesn't match any TCP connection that is tracked by that router.
    – Celada
    Feb 23, 2013 at 1:33
  • Not sure what is off-topic in this question.It might not have some code in the OP, and it could have asked 1 specific question rather than 3, but i believe since related to network programming, it should have been allowed to remain open. I don't think this would be apt at serverfault or superuser.com
    – goldenmean
    Feb 26, 2013 at 13:48

1 Answer 1

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Since this post is reopened and nobody leaves an answer until this moment, I would like to answer it myself based on this article: Peer-to-Peer Communication Across Network Address Translators

About Q1, yes. Without mechanism like hole-punching, the packets one side use to sync with the other side will be dropped by the routers.

About Q2, no exactly. Listening sockets won't work directly. You need other tricks.

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