ZyXEL VES1724-56B2 User Guide - Page 251

ARP Inspection Overview

Page 251 highlights

Chapter 26 IP Source Guard 26.1.1.3 DHCP Relay Option 82 Information The Switch can add information to DHCP requests that it does not discard. This provides the DHCP server more information about the source of the requests. The Switch can add the following information: • Slot ID (1 byte), port ID (1 byte), and source VLAN ID (2 bytes) • System name (up to 32 bytes) This information is stored in an Agent Information field in the option 82 field of the DHCP headers of client DHCP request frames. See Chapter 35 on page 311 for more information about DHCP relay option 82. When the DHCP server responds, the Switch removes the information in the Agent Information field before forwarding the response to the original source. You can configure this setting for each source VLAN. This setting is independent of the DHCP relay settings (Chapter 35 on page 311). 26.1.1.4 Configuring DHCP Snooping Follow these steps to configure DHCP snooping on the Switch. 1 Enable DHCP snooping on the Switch. 2 Enable DHCP snooping on each VLAN, and configure DHCP relay option 82. 3 Configure trusted and untrusted ports, and specify the maximum number of DHCP packets that each port can receive per second. 4 Configure static bindings. 26.1.2 ARP Inspection Overview Use ARP inspection to filter unauthorized ARP packets on the network. This can prevent many kinds of man-in-the-middle attacks, such as the one in the following example. Figure 148 Example: Man-in-the-middle Attack A B X In this example, computer B tries to establish a connection with computer A. Computer X is in the same broadcast domain as computer A and intercepts the ARP request for computer A. Then, computer X does the following things: VES1724-56 User's Guide 251

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Chapter 26 IP Source Guard
VES1724-56 User’s Guide
251
26.1.1.3
DHCP Relay Option 82 Information
The Switch can add information to DHCP requests that it does not discard. This provides the DHCP
server more information about the source of the requests. The Switch can add the following
information:
Slot ID (1 byte), port ID (1 byte), and source VLAN ID (2 bytes)
System name (up to 32 bytes)
This information is stored in an Agent Information field in the option 82 field of the DHCP headers of
client DHCP request frames. See
Chapter 35 on page 311
for more information about DHCP relay
option 82.
When the DHCP server responds, the Switch removes the information in the Agent Information field
before forwarding the response to the original source.
You can configure this setting for each source VLAN. This setting is independent of the DHCP relay
settings (
Chapter 35 on page 311
).
26.1.1.4
Configuring DHCP Snooping
Follow these steps to configure DHCP snooping on the Switch.
1
Enable DHCP snooping on the Switch.
2
Enable DHCP snooping on each VLAN, and configure DHCP relay option 82.
3
Configure trusted and untrusted ports, and specify the maximum number of DHCP packets that
each port can receive per second.
4
Configure static bindings.
26.1.2
ARP Inspection Overview
Use ARP inspection to filter unauthorized ARP packets on the network. This can prevent many kinds
of man-in-the-middle attacks, such as the one in the following example.
Figure 148
Example: Man-in-the-middle Attack
In this example, computer
B
tries to establish a connection with computer
A
. Computer
X
is in the
same broadcast domain as computer
A
and intercepts the ARP request for computer
A
. Then,
computer
X
does the following things:
A
X
B