Netgear FVS124G FVS124G Reference Manual - Page 81

Inbound Rules (Port Forwarding)

Page 81 highlights

Reference Manual for the ProSafe VPN Firewall 25 with 4 Gigabit LAN and Dual WAN Ports • Quality of service (QoS) priorities-Each service at its own native priority that impacts its quality of performance and tolerance for jitter or delays. You can change this QoS priority if desired to change the traffic mix through the system. Inbound Rules (Port Forwarding) Because the FVS124G uses Network Address Translation (NAT), your network presents only one IP address to the Internet and outside users cannot directly address any of your local computers. However, by defining an inbound rule you can make a local server (for example, a web server or game server) visible and available to the Internet. The rule tells the firewall to direct inbound traffic for a particular service to one local server based on the destination port number. This is also known as port forwarding. Figure 6-2: Add Inbound Service Rules screen Note: See "Port Triggering" on page 6-28 for yet another way to allow certain types of inbound traffic that would otherwise be blocked by the firewall. Firewall Protection and Content Filtering 6-5 202-10085-01, March 2005

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Reference Manual for the ProSafe VPN Firewall 25 with 4 Gigabit LAN and Dual WAN Ports
Firewall Protection and Content Filtering
6-5
202-10085-01, March 2005
Quality of service (QoS) priorities—Each service at its own native priority that impacts its
quality of performance and tolerance for jitter or delays. You can change this QoS priority if
desired to change the traffic mix through the system.
Inbound Rules (Port Forwarding)
Because the FVS124G uses Network Address Translation (NAT), your network presents only one
IP address to the Internet and outside users cannot directly address any of your local computers.
However, by defining an inbound rule you can make a local server (for example, a web server or
game server) visible and available to the Internet. The rule tells the firewall to direct inbound
traffic for a particular service to one local server based on the destination port number. This is also
known as port forwarding.
Figure 6-2:
Add Inbound Service Rules screen
Note:
See
“Port Triggering” on page 6-28
for yet another way to allow certain types of
inbound traffic that would otherwise be blocked by the firewall.