Recently I was troubleshooting some odd DNS results between 2 customers that have a B2B connection. The DNS record in question existed in the wild on the internet and resolved to 113.129.255.98 (all IP’s have been randomized using https://onlinerandomtools.com/generate-random-ip for anonymity). Customer A resolved to 192.168.20.5 on their end of the link and Customer B resolved to 172.16.20.57 on the other end, where the server lived, which was the correct one. DNS admins were brought in on both sides. Customer A confirmed that they had Conditional Forwarders configured to query Customer B’s Name Servers for this Zone.
To the Packets! Captures were taken nearest each Name Server and nearest each end of the B2B connection. The change was happening on Customer A’s side of the link behind a outer doing NAT. We had brought up NAT a couple of times but thought “nah, that’s not what NAT does”. Guess what happened when we said “ok, let’s remove the NAT”. By the title of this you can probably guess what happened…Problem solved. We were flabbergasted.
I was familiar with DNS spoofing/poisoning/hijacking but had never thought that NAT could be leveraged in this way. Research brought me to DNS Doctoring which is the non malicious way to manipulate DNS for good rather than for evil. But this was different. Eventually I stumbled across RFC 2694 “DNS extensions to Network Address Translators (DNS_ALG)” https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2694 and Application Level Gateways.
These are a couple of the pages that I found on the subject.
https://blog.webernetz.net/cisco-router-disable-dns-rewrite-alg-for-static-nats/
It took longer than it should have to find the answer because I was using search terms that weren’t used much. I’ve included my verbiage so the next person will find this faster.
On a Cisco IOS device Application Level Gateway for NAT is enabled by default. Which means in a one to one NAT (not overloaded/PAT) the DNS answer within received packets is rewritten to the NAT IP.
So with this config:
ip nat outside source static <outside global> <outside local>
ip nat inside source static 172.16.20.57 192.168.20.5
When you do an nslookup from the receiving side of the NAT (in this case Customer A) you’ll resolve to the outside local instead of the outside global IP you’ll get the outside local one.
You can disable ALG with:
(no) ip nat service alg udp dns
(no) ip nat service alg tcp dns
Or change the NAT so that it doesn’t alter the payload of the packets that contain DNS answers, or the payload of any packets, who knows what other “features” lie in wait:
ip nat inside source static <outside global> <outside local> no-payload
ip nat inside source static 172.16.20.57 192.168.20.5 no-payload
One more reason to hate NAT, which would also have been an acceptable post name.
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