Network
all-nets
and Source/Destination Interface
all
. This allows logging to be turned on for
traffic that matches no IP rule.
3.6.3. IP Rule
An
IP Rule
object consists of two parts:
•
The filtering criteria which target the traffic that the rule is aimed at.
•
The action that the rule will perform on that traffic.
IP Rule Filters
The filtering parameters of an IP rules are as follows:
•
Source Interface.
•
Source Network.
•
Destination Interface.
•
Destination Network.
•
Service (this identifies the protocol of the traffic).
In addition,
geolocation
filters can be applied to the source and destination networks so that
certain countries or regions can be targeted by the rule.
The
Service
in an IP rule can be important because if an
Application Layer Gateway
object is to be
applied to traffic then it must be associated with a service object (see
).
IP Rule Actions
When an IP rule is triggered by a match then one of the following
Actions
can occur:
•
Allow
The packet is allowed to pass. As the rule is applied to only the opening of a connection, an
entry in the "state table" is made to record that a connection is open. The remaining packets
related to this connection will pass through the NetDefendOS "stateful engine".
•
FwdFast
Let the packet pass through the NetDefend Firewall without setting up a state for it in the
state table. This means that the stateful inspection process is bypassed and is therefore less
secure than
Allow
or
NAT
rules. Packet processing time is also slower than
Allow
rules since
every packet is checked against the entire rule set.
Instead of using an
IP Rule
object, the FwdFast functionality can alternatively be configured
using a
Stateless Policy
object. This is described in
Section 3.6.8, “Stateless Policy”
•
NAT
This functions like an
Allow
rule, but with dynamic address translation (NAT) enabled (see
in
Chapter 7, Address Translation
for a detailed description).
•
SAT
Chapter 3: Fundamentals
233
Summary of Contents for NetDefendOS
Page 30: ...Figure 1 3 Packet Flow Schematic Part III Chapter 1 NetDefendOS Overview 30 ...
Page 32: ...Chapter 1 NetDefendOS Overview 32 ...
Page 144: ...Chapter 2 Management and Maintenance 144 ...
Page 284: ...Chapter 3 Fundamentals 284 ...
Page 392: ...Chapter 4 Routing 392 ...
Page 419: ... Host 2001 DB8 1 MAC 00 90 12 13 14 15 5 Click OK Chapter 5 DHCP Services 419 ...
Page 420: ...Chapter 5 DHCP Services 420 ...
Page 573: ...Chapter 6 Security Mechanisms 573 ...
Page 607: ...Chapter 7 Address Translation 607 ...
Page 666: ...Chapter 8 User Authentication 666 ...
Page 775: ...Chapter 9 VPN 775 ...
Page 819: ...Chapter 10 Traffic Management 819 ...
Page 842: ...Chapter 11 High Availability 842 ...
Page 866: ...Default Enabled Chapter 13 Advanced Settings 866 ...
Page 879: ...Chapter 13 Advanced Settings 879 ...