Prestige 662H/HW Series User’s Guide

14.3.3.4 Destination Address

What is the connection’s destination address; is it on the LAN, DMZ, WAN? Is it a single IP, a range of IPs or a subnet?

14.4 Connection Direction Example

This section describes examples for firewall rules for connections going from LAN to WAN and from WAN to LAN. Rules for the DMZ work in a similar fashion.

LAN to LAN/ Router, WAN to WAN/ Router and DMZ to DMZ/Router rules applies to packets coming in on the associated interface (LAN, WAN, or DMZ respectively). LAN to LAN/ Router means policies for LAN-to-Prestige (the policies for managing the Prestige through the LAN interface) and policies for LAN-to-LAN (the policies that control routing between two subnets on the LAN). Similarly, WAN to WAN/ Router and DMZ to DMZ/ Router polices apply in the same way to the WAN and DMZ ports.

14.4.1 LAN to WAN Rules

The default rule for LAN to WAN traffic is that all users on the LAN are allowed non- restricted access to the WAN. When you configure a LAN to WAN rule, you in essence want to limit some or all users from accessing certain services on the WAN. See the following figure.

Figure 58 LAN to WAN Traffic

14.4.2 WAN to LAN Rules

The default rule for WAN to LAN traffic blocks all incoming connections (WAN to LAN). If you wish to allow certain WAN users to have access to your LAN, you will need to create custom rules to allow it.

See the following figure.

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Chapter 14 Firewall Configuration