User's Manual
Table Of Contents
- About This Guide
- Get to Know Your Modem Router
- Quick Start
- Log In to Your Modem Router
- Configure Internet Connections
- Network Security
- USB Settings
- Parental Control
- Guest Network
- NAT Forwarding
- Specify Your Network Settings
- Administrate Your Network
- Appendix: Troubleshooting

Chapter 9
NAT Forwarding
Modem router’s NAT (Network Address Translation) feature makes the devices in the
LAN use the same public IP address to communicate in the Internet, which protects the
local network by hiding IP addresses of the devices. However, it also brings about the
problem that external host cannot initiatively communicate with the specified device in
the local network.
With forwarding feature the modem router can penetrate the isolation of NAT and
allows the external hosts in the Internet to initiatively communicate with the devices in
the local network, thus to realize some special functions.
TP-LINK modem router includes three forwarding rules. If two or more rules are set, the
priority of implementation from high to low is Port Forwarding, Port Triggers and DMZ.
This chapter contains the following sections:
• Share Local Resources in the Internet by Port Forwarding
• Open Ports Dynamically by Port Triggers
• Free Applications from Port Restriction by DMZ










