Chapter 19 ALG

19.1.2 What You Need to Know

Application Layer Gateway (ALG), NAT and Firewall

The ZyWALL can function as an Application Layer Gateway (ALG) to allow certain NAT un-friendly applications (such as SIP) to operate properly through the ZyWALL’s NAT and firewall. The ZyWALL dynamically creates an implicit NAT session and firewall session for the application’s traffic from the WAN to the LAN. The ALG on the ZyWALL supports all of the ZyWALL’s NAT mapping types.

FTP ALG

The FTP ALG allows TCP packets with a specified port destination to pass through. If the FTP server is located on the LAN, you must also configure NAT (port forwarding) and firewall rules if you want to allow access to the server from the WAN.

H.323 ALG

The H.323 ALG supports peer-to-peer H.323 calls.

The H.323 ALG handles H.323 calls that go through NAT or that the ZyWALL routes. You can also make other H.323 calls that do not go through NAT or routing. Examples would be calls between LAN IP addresses that are on the same subnet.

The H.323 ALG allows calls to go out through NAT. For example, you could make a call from a private IP address on the LAN to a peer device on the WAN.

The H.323 ALG operates on TCP packets with a specified port destination.

The ZyWALL allows H.323 audio connections.

The ZyWALL can also apply bandwidth management to traffic that goes through the H.323 ALG.

The following example shows H.323 signaling (1) and audio (2) sessions between H.323 devices A and B.

Figure 201 H.323 ALG Example

SIP ALG

SIP phones can be in any zone (including LAN, DMZ, WAN), and the SIP server and SIP clients can be in the same network or different networks.

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ZyWALL USG 50 User’s Guide