Netgear DGFV338 DGFV338 Reference Manual - Page 89

Order of Precedence for Rules, Customized Services, request for service to a server computer

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DGFV338 ProSafe Wireless ADSL Modem VPN Firewall Router Reference Manual Order of Precedence for Rules As you define new rules, they are added to the tables in the Rules menu, as shown in Figure 4-12: Figure 4-12 For any traffic attempting to pass through the firewall, the packet information is subjected to the rules in the order shown in the LAN WAN Rules Table, beginning at the top and proceeding to the default rules at the bottom. In some cases, the order of precedence of two or more rules may be important in determining the disposition of a packet. The Up and Down icons adjacent to each rule allows you to relocate a defined rule to a new position in the table. Customized Services Services are functions performed by server computers at the request of client computers. You can configure up to 125 custom services. For example, Web servers serve Web pages, time servers serve time and date information, and game hosts serve data about other players' moves. When a computer on the Internet sends a request for service to a server computer, the requested service is identified by a service or port number. This number appears as the destination port number in the transmitted IP packets. For example, a packet that is sent with destination port number 80 is an HTTP (Web server) request. The service numbers for many common protocols are defined by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) and published in RFC1700, "Assigned Numbers." Service numbers for other applications are typically chosen from the range 1024 to 65535 by the authors of the application. Security and Firewall Protection v1.0, April 2007 4-17

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DGFV338 ProSafe Wireless ADSL Modem VPN Firewall Router Reference Manual
Security and Firewall Protection
4-17
v1.0, April 2007
Order of Precedence for Rules
As you define new rules, they are added to the tables in the Rules menu, as shown in
Figure 4-12
:
For any traffic attempting to pass through the firewall, the packet information is subjected to the
rules in the order shown in the LAN WAN Rules Table, beginning at the top and proceeding to the
default rules at the bottom. In some cases, the order of precedence of two or more rules may be
important in determining the disposition of a packet. The
Up
and
Down
icons adjacent to each rule
allows you to relocate a defined rule to a new position in the table.
Customized Services
Services are functions performed by server computers at the request of client computers. You can
configure up to 125 custom services.
For example, Web servers serve Web pages, time servers serve time and date information, and
game hosts serve data about other players’ moves. When a computer on the Internet sends a
request for service to a server computer, the requested service is identified by a service or port
number. This number appears as the destination port number in the transmitted IP packets. For
example, a packet that is sent with destination port number 80 is an HTTP (Web server) request.
The service numbers for many common protocols are defined by the Internet Engineering Task
Force (IETF) and published in RFC1700, “Assigned Numbers.” Service numbers for other
applications are typically chosen from the range 1024 to 65535 by the authors of the application.
Figure 4-12