Technical Reference
OPEN824RL / RLW ADSL / VoIP Routers
91
Virtual Server (“Port Forwarding”)
In TCP/IP and UDP networks, a port is a 16-bit number used to identify an application program (usually a
server) to which incoming connections should be delivered. Some ports have numbers that are pre-assigned
to them by the IANA (the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority), and these are referred to as “well-known
ports”. Servers follow the well-known port assignments so clients can locate them.
If you wish to run a server on your network that can be accessed from the WAN (i.e. from other machines on
the Internet outside your local network), or any application that can accept incoming connections (e.g. Peer-to-
peer/P2P software such as instant messaging applications and P2P file-sharing applications) and are using
NAT (Network Address Translation), then you will usually need to configure your router to forward these
incoming connection attempts using specific ports to the computer on the network running the application. You
will also need to use port forwarding if you want to host an online game server.
The reason for this is that when using NAT, your publicly accessible IP address will be used by and point to
your router, which then needs to deliver all traffic to the private IP addresses used by your computers. Please
see the
WAN
configuration section of this manual for more information on NAT.
The device can be configured as a virtual server so that remote users accessing services such as Web or FTP
services via the public (WAN) IP address can be automatically redirected to local servers in the LAN network.
Depending on the requested service (TCP/UDP port number), the device redirects the external service request
to the appropriate server within the LAN.
To Access the Virtual Server Screen:
From the
Configuration
menu list,
Click
Virtual Server.
The following appears: