Netgear SRX5308 SRX5308 Reference Manual - Page 258

Content Filtering, Source MAC Filtering, Features That Increase Traffic

Page 258 highlights

ProSafe Gigabit Quad WAN SSL VPN Firewall SRX5308 Reference Manual Content Filtering If you want to reduce traffic by preventing access to certain sites on the Internet, you can use the VPN firewall's content filtering feature. By default, this feature is disabled; all requested traffic from any website is allowed. • Web object blocking. You can block the following Web component types: embedded objects (ActiveX, Java, Flash), proxies, and cookies. • Keyword and file extension blocking. You can specify words that, should they appear in the website name (URL), file extension, or newsgroup name, cause that site, file, or newsgroup to be blocked by the VPN firewall. • URL blocking. You can specify URLs that are blocked by the VPN firewall. For more information, see "Content Filtering (Blocking Internet Sites)" on page 4-41. Source MAC Filtering If you want to reduce outgoing traffic by preventing Internet access by certain PCs on the LAN, you can use the source MAC filtering feature to drop the traffic received from the PCs with the specified MAC addresses. By default, this feature is disabled; all traffic received from PCs with any MAC address is allowed. See "Enabling Source MAC Filtering" on page 4-44 for the procedure on how to use this feature. Features That Increase Traffic The following features of the VPN firewall tend to increase the traffic load on the WAN side: • LAN WAN inbound rules (also referred to as port forwarding) • DMZ WAN inbound rules (also referred to as port forwarding) • Port triggering • Enabling the DMZ port • Configuring exposed hosts • Configuring VPN tunnels LAN WAN Inbound Rules and DMZ WAN Inbound Rules (Port Forwarding) The LAN WAN Rules screen and the DMZ WAN Rules screen list all existing rules for inbound traffic (from WAN to LAN and from WAN to the DMZ). If you have not defined any rules, only the default rule is listed. The default rule blocks all access from outside except responses to requests from the LAN side. Any inbound rule that you create allows additional incoming traffic and therefore increases the traffic load on the WAN side. 8-4 Network and System Management v1.0, April 2010

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ProSafe Gigabit Quad WAN SSL VPN Firewall SRX5308 Reference Manual
8-4
Network and System Management
v1.0, April 2010
Content Filtering
If you want to reduce traffic by preventing access to certain sites on the Internet, you can use the
VPN firewall’s content filtering feature. By default, this feature is disabled; all requested traffic
from any website is allowed.
Web object blocking
. You can block the following Web component types: embedded objects
(ActiveX, Java, Flash), proxies, and cookies.
Keyword and file extension blocking
.
You can specify words that, should they appear in the
website name (URL), file extension, or newsgroup name, cause that site, file, or newsgroup to
be blocked by the VPN firewall.
URL blocking
. You can specify URLs that are blocked by the VPN firewall.
For more information, see
“Content Filtering (Blocking Internet Sites)” on page 4-41
.
Source MAC Filtering
If you want to reduce outgoing traffic by preventing Internet access by certain PCs on the LAN,
you can use the source MAC filtering feature to drop the traffic received from the PCs with the
specified MAC addresses. By default, this feature is disabled; all traffic received from PCs with
any MAC address is allowed. See
“Enabling Source MAC Filtering” on page 4-44
for the
procedure on how to use this feature.
Features That Increase Traffic
The following features of the VPN firewall tend to increase the traffic load on the WAN side:
LAN WAN inbound rules (also referred to as port forwarding)
DMZ WAN inbound rules (also referred to as port forwarding)
Port triggering
Enabling the DMZ port
Configuring exposed hosts
Configuring VPN tunnels
LAN WAN Inbound Rules and DMZ WAN Inbound Rules (Port Forwarding)
The LAN WAN Rules screen and the DMZ WAN Rules screen list all existing rules for inbound
traffic (from WAN to LAN and from WAN to the DMZ). If you have not defined any rules, only
the default rule is listed. The default rule blocks all access from outside except responses to
requests from the LAN side. Any inbound rule that you create allows additional incoming traffic
and therefore increases the traffic load on the WAN side.