| This target is only valid in the |
| .B nat |
| table, in the |
| .B PREROUTING |
| and |
| .B OUTPUT |
| chains, and user-defined chains which are only called from those |
| chains. It specifies that the destination address of the packet |
| should be modified (and all future packets in this connection will |
| also be mangled), and rules should cease being examined. It takes the |
| following options: |
| .TP |
| \fB\-\-to\-destination\fP [\fIipaddr\fP[\fB\-\fP\fIipaddr\fP]][\fB:\fP\fIport\fP[\fB\-\fP\fIport\fP]] |
| which can specify a single new destination IP address, an inclusive |
| range of IP addresses. Optionally a port range, |
| if the rule also specifies one of the following protocols: |
| \fBtcp\fP, \fBudp\fP, \fBdccp\fP or \fBsctp\fP. |
| If no port range is specified, then the destination port will never be |
| modified. If no IP address is specified then only the destination port |
| will be modified. |
| In Kernels up to 2.6.10 you can add several \-\-to\-destination options. For |
| those kernels, if you specify more than one destination address, either via an |
| address range or multiple \-\-to\-destination options, a simple round-robin (one |
| after another in cycle) load balancing takes place between these addresses. |
| Later Kernels (>= 2.6.11-rc1) don't have the ability to NAT to multiple ranges |
| anymore. |
| .TP |
| \fB\-\-random\fP |
| If option |
| \fB\-\-random\fP |
| is used then port mapping will be randomized (kernel >= 2.6.22). |
| .TP |
| \fB\-\-persistent\fP |
| Gives a client the same source-/destination-address for each connection. |
| This supersedes the SAME target. Support for persistent mappings is available |
| from 2.6.29-rc2. |
| .TP |
| IPv6 support available since Linux kernels >= 3.7. |