Chapter 22 Firewall

the firewall rule to always be in effect. The following figure shows the results of this rule.

Figure 215 Blocking All LAN to WAN IRC Traffic Example

Your firewall would have the following rules.

Table 104 Blocking All LAN to WAN IRC Traffic Example

#

USER

SOURCE

DESTINATION

SCHEDULE

SERVICE

ACTION

1

Any

Any

Any

Any

IRC

Deny

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2

Any

Any

Any

Any

Any

Allow

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The first row blocks LAN access to the IRC service on the WAN.

The second row is the firewall’s default policy that allows all LAN1 to WAN traffic.

The ZyWALL applies the firewall rules in order. So for this example, when the ZyWALL receives traffic from the LAN, it checks it against the first rule. If the traffic matches (if it is IRC traffic) the firewall takes the action in the rule (drop) and stops checking the firewall rules. Any traffic that does not match the first firewall rule will match the second rule and the ZyWALL forwards it.

Now suppose that your company wants to let the CEO use IRC. You can configure a LAN1 to WAN firewall rule that allows IRC traffic from the IP address of the CEO’s computer. You can also configure a LAN to WAN rule that allows IRC traffic from any computer through which the CEO logs into the ZyWALL with his/her user name. In order to make sure that the CEO’s computer always uses the same IP address, make sure it either:

Has a static IP address, or

You configure a static DHCP entry for it so the ZyWALL always assigns it the same IP address (see DHCP Settings on page 268 for information on DHCP).

 

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ZyWALL USG 50 User’s Guide