Bandwidth | You can assign the bandwidth by the unit of |
| Kbps (1024 bit per second). You can limit the |
| maximum bandwidth consumed by this rule by |
| selecting “Maximum”. You also can reserve |
| enough bandwidth for this rule by selecting |
| “Guarentee”. |
Source Address | You can select IP or MAC address as the source |
| address criteria. |
Source MAC Address | Enter the MAC address of the packet that this |
| rule will apply to. |
Source IP Address | Enter the source IP address range of the |
| packets that this rule will apply to. If you assign |
| 192.168.2.3 – 192.168.2.5, it means 3 IP |
| addresses: 192.168.2.3, 192.168.2.4 and |
| 192.168.2.5 |
Destination IP Address | Enter the source IP address range of the |
| packets that this rule will apply to. If you assign |
| 192.168.2.3 – 192.168.2.5, it means 3 IP |
| addresses: 192.168.2.3, 192.168.2.4 and |
| 192.168.2.5 |
Traffic Type | Select the traffic type of the packets that this rule |
| will apply to. We list some popular applications |
| here to ease the configuration. You also can get |
| the same result by using other parameters, for |
| example source or destination port number, if |
| you are familiar with the application protocol. |
Protocol | Select the protocol type of the packets that this |
| rule will apply to. |
Source Port Range | Enter the source port range of the packets that |
| this rule will apply to. You can assign a single |
| port number here or assign a range of port |
| numbers by assigning the first port number and |
| the last port number of the range. The two |
| numbers are separated by a dash |
| example |
| to port number 150 – the range of 50 port |
| numbers. |
Destination Port Range | Enter the destination port range of the packets |
| that this rule will apply to. You can assign a |
| single port number here or assign a range of |
| port numbers by assigning the first port number |
| and the last port number of the range. The two |
| numbers are separated by a dash |
| example |
|
|
| 42 |