Netgear FVS336G-100NAS Reference Manual - Page 133

Configuring User, Group, and Global Policies

Page 133 highlights

ProSafe Dual WAN Gigabit Firewall with SSL & IPsec VPN FVS336G Reference Manual Configuring User, Group, and Global Policies An administrator can define and apply user, group and global policies to predefined network resource objects, IP addresses, address ranges, or all IP addresses and to different SSL VPN services. A specific hierarchy is invoked over which policies take precedence. The VPN firewall policy hierarchy is defined as: 1. User Policies take precedence over all Group Policies. 2. Group Policies take precedence over all Global Policies. 3. If two or more user, group or global policies are configured, the most specific policy takes precedence. For example, a policy configured for a single IP address takes precedence over a policy configured for a range of addresses. And a policy that applies to a range of IP addresses takes precedence over a policy applied to all IP addresses. If two or more IP address ranges are configured, then the smallest address range takes precedence. Hostnames are treated the same as individual IP addresses. Network resources are prioritized just like other address ranges. However, the prioritization is based on the individual address or address range, not the entire network resource. For example, let's assume the following global policy configuration: • Policy 1: A Deny rule has been configured to block all services to the IP address range 10.0.0.0 - 10.0.0.255. • Policy 2: A Deny rule has been configured to block FTP access to 10.0.1.2 - 10.0.1.10. • Policy 3: A Permit rule has been configured to allow FTP access to the predefined network resource, FTP Servers. The FTP Servers network resource includes the following addresses: 10.0.0.5 - 10.0.0.20 and ftp.company.com, which resolves to 10.0.1.3. Assuming that no conflicting user or group policies have been configured, if a user attempted to access: • An FTP server at 10.0.0.1, the user would be blocked by Policy 1. • An FTP server at 10.0.1.5, the user would be blocked by Policy 2. • An FTP server at 10.0.0.10, the user would be granted access by Policy 3. The IP address range 10.0.0.5 - 10.0.0.20 is more specific than the IP address range defined in Policy 1. Virtual Private Networking Using SSL Connections v1.0, October 2007 6-15

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ProSafe Dual WAN Gigabit Firewall with SSL & IPsec VPN FVS336G Reference Manual
Virtual Private Networking Using SSL Connections
6-15
v1.0, October 2007
Configuring User, Group, and Global Policies
An administrator can define and apply user, group and global policies to predefined network
resource objects, IP addresses, address ranges, or all IP addresses and to different SSL VPN
services. A specific hierarchy is invoked over which policies take precedence. The VPN firewall
policy hierarchy is defined as:
1.
User Policies take precedence over all Group Policies.
2.
Group Policies take precedence over all Global Policies.
3.
If two or more user, group or global policies are configured,
the most specific policy
takes
precedence.
For example, a policy configured for a single IP address takes precedence over a policy configured
for a range of addresses. And a policy that applies to a range of IP addresses takes precedence over
a policy applied to all IP addresses. If two or more IP address ranges are configured, then the
smallest address range takes precedence. Hostnames are treated the same as individual IP
addresses.
Network resources are prioritized just like other address ranges. However, the prioritization is
based on the individual address or address range, not the entire network resource.
For example, let’s assume the following global policy configuration:
Policy 1: A Deny rule has been configured to block all services to the IP address range
10.0.0.0 – 10.0.0.255.
Policy 2: A Deny rule has been configured to block FTP access to 10.0.1.2 – 10.0.1.10.
Policy 3: A Permit rule has been configured to allow FTP access to the predefined network
resource, FTP Servers. The FTP Servers network resource includes the following addresses:
10.0.0.5 – 10.0.0.20 and ftp.company.com, which resolves to 10.0.1.3.
Assuming that no conflicting user or group policies have been configured, if a user attempted to
access:
An FTP server at 10.0.0.1, the user would be blocked by Policy 1.
An FTP server at 10.0.1.5, the user would be blocked by Policy 2.
An FTP server at 10.0.0.10, the user would be granted access by Policy 3. The IP address
range 10.0.0.5 - 10.0.0.20 is more specific than the IP address range defined in Policy 1.