Chapter 12 Policy and Static Routes

12.1.1What You Can Do in the Policy and Static Route Screens

Use the Policy Route screens (see Section 12.2 on page 279) to list and configure policy routes.

Use the Static Route screens (see Section 12.3 on page 283) to list and configure static routes.

12.1.2What You Need to Know About Policy and Static Routing

Policy Routing

Traditionally, routing is based on the destination address only and the ZyWALL takes the shortest path to forward a packet. IP Policy Routing (IPPR) provides a mechanism to override the default routing behavior and alter the packet forwarding based on the policy defined by the network administrator. Policy-based routing is applied to incoming packets on a per interface basis, prior to the normal routing.

How You Can Use Policy Routing

Source-Based Routing – Network administrators can use policy-based routing to direct traffic from different users through different connections.

Bandwidth Shaping – You can allocate bandwidth to traffic that matches routing policies and prioritize traffic (however the application patrol’s bandwidth management is more flexible and recommended for TCP and UDP traffic). Use policy routes to manage other types of traffic (like ICMP traffic) and send traffic through VPN tunnels.

"Bandwidth management in policy routes has priority over application patrol bandwidth management.

Cost Savings – IPPR allows organizations to distribute interactive traffic on high- bandwidth, high-cost paths while using low-cost paths for batch traffic.

Load Sharing – Network administrators can use IPPR to distribute traffic among multiple paths.

NAT - The ZyWALL performs NAT by default for traffic going to or from the WAN interfaces. A routing policy’s SNAT allows network administrators to have traffic received on a specified interface use a specified IP address as the source IP address.

A NAT loopback policy route lets local users use a domain name to access a virtual server.

When creating a virtual server that local users will use a domain name to access, you can select an option to configure a NAT loopback policy route.

Static Routes

The ZyWALL usually uses the default gateway to route outbound traffic from computers on the LAN to the Internet. To have the ZyWALL send data to devices not reachable through the default gateway, use static routes. Configure static routes if you need to use RIP or OSPF to propagate the routing information to other routers. See Chapter 13 on page 287 for more on RIP and OSPF.

278

 

ZyWALL USG 100/200 Series User’s Guide