SonicWALL SonicWALL UTM Appliance manual Navigate to Firewall Access Rules

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Step 2: Create an AO for Mysonicwall.com. While using a FQDN is often more “friendly”, in this example we’ve chosen the IP address.

Step 2: Create an AO Group for the Allowed sites.

Step 3: Navigate to Firewall > Access Rules.

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Contents Contents Page Integrating LDAP/Active Directory with Sonicwall UTM Configuring the CA on the Active Directory ServerImporting the CA Certificate onto the SonicWALL Configuring the SonicWALL Appliance for LdapPage Page Page Page Page Page Page Enable Radius to Ldap Relay Enables this feature Authentication Page Page Page Creating Firewall Rules with Ldap Groups/Users SonicOS Options That Leverage Groups/UsersPage Page Firewall Rules with Bandwidth Management & Logging Page Blocking Domains with Firewall Rules Blocking Websites Domain Names for Groups/UsersPage Page Navigate to Firewall Access Rules Create a rule to allow Http traffic for your allowed lists Do the same for Https Create the deny rules for Http and Https Firewall rules should now look like the below picture Blocking Https SSL Domains with SSL Control Configuring a SSL Blacklist and Whitelist Page Applying Different CFS Policies to Groups Page Creating Custom CFS Policies Navigate to the Policy tab and add a new CFS policy Page Page Page Http//$$fwinterface$$/$#SWLSTYLESCSS#$ Variables for Custom Block Page in SonicOSAdvanced Sample Code for SonicOS Basic Sample Code for SonicOSPage Page Sample Code for SonicOS 5.1 or Earlier Sample JavaScript Code for SonicOSApplying Application Firewall Polices to Groups/Users Page Page Page Page Tightening Control over the Browsing Behavior of Users Blocking IM Traffic Categorically Applying Granular IM Policies Global VPN Client GVC Applying VPN Access Policies to Groups/UsersPage SSL-VPN NetExtender Guest Services Wireless Guest Services