Chapter 7 WAN screens
115
Nortel Business Secure Router 252 Configuration — Basics
describes the fields in
.
Table 19
WAN: IP
Label
Description
Get automatically
from ISP
Select this option if your ISP did not assign you a fixed IP address.
This is the default selection.
Use fixed IP
address
Select this option if your ISP assigned a fixed IP address.
My WAN IP
Address
Enter your WAN IP address in this field if you selected
Use Fixed
IP Address.
Network Address
Translation
With Network Address Translation (NAT), the router translations an
Internet protocol address used within one network (for example, a
private IP address used in a local network) to a different IP address
known within another network (for example, a public IP address
used on the Internet). NAT is available when the device is in routing
mode.
Choose
None
to disable NAT
.
Choose
SUA Only
if you have a single public IP address. SUA
(Single User Account) is a subset of NAT that supports two types of
mapping:
Many-to-One
and
Server
.
Choose
Full Feature
if you have multiple public IP addresses.
Full
Feature
mapping types include:
One-to-One
,
Many-to-One
(SUA/
PAT),
Many-to-Many Overload
,
Many- One-to-One
and
Server
.
After you select
Full Feature,
you must configure at least one
address-mapping set.
Metric (
This field sets this route's priority among the routes the Business
Secure Router uses.
The metric represents the cost of transmission. A router determines
the best route for transmission by choosing a path with the lowest
cost. RIP routing uses hop count as the measurement of cost, with
a minimum of 1 for directly connected networks. The number must
be between 1 and 15; a number greater than 15 means the link is
down. The smaller the number, the lower the cost.
Private (PPPoE and
PPPoA only)
This parameter determines if the Business Secure Router includes
the route to this remote node in its RIP broadcasts. If set to Yes,
this route is kept private and not included in RIP broadcast. If No,
the route to this remote node is propagated to other hosts through
RIP broadcasts.
Summary of Contents for BSR252
Page 28: ...28 Tables NN47923 500 ...
Page 44: ...44 Chapter 1 Getting to know your Business Secure Router NN47923 500 ...
Page 52: ...52 Chapter 2 Introducing the WebGUI NN47923 500 ...
Page 70: ...70 Chapter 3 Wizard setup NN47923 500 ...
Page 96: ...96 Chapter 5 System screens NN47923 500 ...
Page 114: ...114 Chapter 7 WAN screens NN47923 500 Figure 27 WAN IP ...
Page 120: ...120 Chapter 7 WAN screens NN47923 500 Figure 31 Dial Backup Setup ...
Page 128: ...128 Chapter 7 WAN screens NN47923 500 ...
Page 152: ...152 Chapter 9 Static Route screens NN47923 500 ...
Page 194: ...194 Chapter 11 Firewall screens NN47923 500 ...
Page 210: ...210 Chapter 13 VPN NN47923 500 Figure 67 Summary IP Policies ...
Page 222: ...222 Chapter 13 VPN NN47923 500 Figure 71 VPN Branch Office rule setup ...
Page 256: ...256 Chapter 13 VPN NN47923 500 Figure 81 VPN Client Termination advanced ...
Page 260: ...260 Chapter 13 VPN NN47923 500 ...
Page 264: ...264 Chapter 14 Certificates NN47923 500 Figure 83 My Certificates ...
Page 270: ...270 Chapter 14 Certificates NN47923 500 Figure 85 My Certificate create ...
Page 274: ...274 Chapter 14 Certificates NN47923 500 Figure 86 My Certificate details ...
Page 282: ...282 Chapter 14 Certificates NN47923 500 Figure 89 Trusted CA details ...
Page 298: ...298 Chapter 14 Certificates NN47923 500 ...
Page 316: ...316 Chapter 16 IEEE 802 1x NN47923 500 ...
Page 320: ...320 Chapter 17 Authentication server NN47923 500 Figure 106 Local User database edit ...
Page 328: ...328 Chapter 17 Authentication server NN47923 500 ...
Page 376: ...376 Chapter 20 Logs Screens NN47923 500 Figure 150 Log settings ...
Page 386: ...386 Chapter 20 Logs Screens NN47923 500 ...
Page 393: ...Chapter 21 Call scheduling screens 393 Nortel Business Secure Router 252 Configuration Basics ...
Page 394: ...394 Chapter 21 Call scheduling screens NN47923 500 ...
Page 410: ...410 Chapter 22 Maintenance NN47923 500 ...