As part of Route Properties Host Monitoring can be enabled and a single route can have multiple
hosts associated with it for monitoring. Multiple hosts can provide a higher certainty that any
network problem resides in the local network rather than because one remote host itself is down.
In association with Host Monitoring there are two numerical parameters for a route:
Grace Period
This is the period of time after startup or after reconfiguration
of the NetDefend Firewall which NetDefendOS will wait
before starting Route Monitoring. This waiting period allows
time for all network links to initialize once the firewall comes
online.
Minimum Number of Hosts
Available
This is the minimum number of hosts that must be considered
to be accessible before the route is deemed to have failed. The
criteria for host accessibility are described below.
Specifying Hosts
For each host specified for host monitoring there are a number of property parameters that should be
set:
•
Method
The method by which the host is to be polled. This can be one of:
•
ICMP - ICMP "Ping" polling. An IP address must be specified for this.
•
TCP - A TCP connection is established to and then disconnected from the host. An IP
address must be specified for this.
•
HTTP - A normal HTTP server request using a URL. A URL must be specified for this as
well as a text string which is the beginning (or complete) text of a valid response. If no text
is specified, any response from the server will be valid.
•
IP Address
The IP address of the host when using the ICMP or TCP option.
•
Port Number
The port number for polling when using the TCP option.
•
Interval
The interval in milliseconds between polling attempts. The default setting is 10,000 and the
minimum value allowed is 100 ms.
•
Sample
The number of polling attempts used as a sample size for calculating the Percentage Loss and
the Average Latency. This value cannot be less than 1.
•
Maximum Failed Poll Attempts
The maximum permissible number of polling attempts that fail. If this number is exceeded then
the host is considered unreachable.
•
Max Average Latency
The maximum number of milliseconds allowable between a poll request and the response. If this
threshold is exceeded then the host is considered unreachable. Average Latency is calculated by
averaging the response times from the host. If a polling attempt receives no response then it is
not included in the averaging calculation.
4.2.4. Host Monitoring for Route
Failover
Chapter 4. Routing
160
Summary of Contents for NetDefend DFL-260E
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...