13.5. Connection Timeout Settings
The settings in this section specify how long a connection can remain idle, that is to say with no data
being sent through it, before it is automatically closed. Please note that each connection has two
timeout values: one for each direction. A connection is closed if either of the two values reaches 0.
TCP SYN Idle Lifetime
Specifies in seconds how long a TCP connection, that is not yet fully established, is allowed to idle
before being closed.
Default: 60
TCP Idle Lifetime
Specifies in seconds how long a fully established TCP connection may idle before being closed.
Connections become fully established once packets with their SYN flags off have travelled in both
directions.
Default: 262144
TCP FIN Idle Lifetime
Specifies in seconds how long a TCP connection about to close may idle before finally being closed.
Connections reach this state when a packet with its FIN flag on has passed in any direction.
Default: 80
UDP Idle Lifetime
Specifies in seconds how long UDP connections may idle before being closed. This timeout value is
usually low, as UDP has no way of signalling when the connection is about to close.
Default: 130
UDP Bidirectional Keep-alive
This allows both sides to keep a UDP connection alive. The default is for NetDefendOS to mark a
connection as alive (not idle) every time data is sent from the side that opened the connection.
Connections that do not receive any data from the opening side within the UDP lifetime will
therefore be closed even if the other side continues to transmit data.
Default: Disabled
Ping Idle Lifetime
Specifies in seconds how long a Ping (ICMP ECHO) connection can remain idle before it is closed.
Default: 8
IGMP Idle Lifetime
Connection lifetime for IGMP in seconds.
Default: 12
13.5. Connection Timeout Settings
Chapter 13. Advanced Settings
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Summary of Contents for DFL-1600 - Security Appliance
Page 27: ...1 3 NetDefendOS State Engine Packet Flow Chapter 1 NetDefendOS Overview 27 ...
Page 79: ...2 7 3 Restore to Factory Defaults Chapter 2 Management and Maintenance 79 ...
Page 146: ...3 9 DNS Chapter 3 Fundamentals 146 ...
Page 227: ...4 7 5 Advanced Settings for Transparent Mode Chapter 4 Routing 227 ...
Page 241: ...5 4 IP Pools Chapter 5 DHCP Services 241 ...
Page 339: ...6 7 Blacklisting Hosts and Networks Chapter 6 Security Mechanisms 339 ...
Page 360: ...7 4 7 SAT and FwdFast Rules Chapter 7 Address Translation 360 ...
Page 382: ...8 3 Customizing HTML Pages Chapter 8 User Authentication 382 ...
Page 386: ... The TLS ALG 9 1 5 The TLS Alternative for VPN Chapter 9 VPN 386 ...
Page 439: ...Figure 9 3 PPTP Client Usage 9 5 4 PPTP L2TP Clients Chapter 9 VPN 439 ...
Page 450: ...9 7 6 Specific Symptoms Chapter 9 VPN 450 ...
Page 488: ...10 4 6 Setting Up SLB_SAT Rules Chapter 10 Traffic Management 488 ...
Page 503: ...11 6 HA Advanced Settings Chapter 11 High Availability 503 ...
Page 510: ...12 3 5 Limitations Chapter 12 ZoneDefense 510 ...
Page 533: ...13 9 Miscellaneous Settings Chapter 13 Advanced Settings 533 ...