Netgear SRXN3205 SRXN3205 Reference Manual - Page 164

Schedule, Block Sites, Source MAC Filtering, Keyword and Domain Name Blocking.

Page 164 highlights

ProSafe Wireless-N VPN Firewall SRXN3205 Reference Manual See "Managing Groups and Hosts (LAN Groups)" on page 3-4 for the procedure on how to use this feature. Schedule If you have set firewall rules on the Rules screen, you can configure three different schedules (for example, schedule 1, schedule 2, and schedule 3) for when a rule is to be applied. Once a schedule is configured, it affects all Rules that use this schedule. You specify the days of the week and time of day for each schedule. See "Setting Schedules to Block or Allow Traffic" on page 5-17 for the procedure on how to use this feature. Block Sites If you want to reduce traffic by preventing access to certain sites on the Internet, you can use the VPN firewall's filtering feature. By default, this feature is disabled; all requested traffic from any Web site is allowed. • Keyword (and Domain Name) Blocking. You can specify up to 32 words that, should they appear in the Web site name (i.e., URL) or in a newsgroup name, will cause that site or newsgroup to be blocked by the VPN firewall. You can apply the keywords to one or more groups. Requests from the PCs in the groups for which keyword blocking has been enabled will be blocked. Blocking does not occur for the PCs that are in the groups for which keyword blocking has not been enabled. You can bypass keyword blocking for trusted domains by adding the exact matching domain to the list of Trusted Domains. Access to the domains on this list by PCs even in the groups for which keyword blocking has been enabled will still be allowed without any blocking. • Web Component blocking. You can block the following Web component types: Proxy, Java, ActiveX, and Cookies. Sites on the Trusted Domains list are still subject to Web component blocking when the blocking of a particular Web component has been enabled. See "Setting Block Sites (Content Filtering)" on page 5-18 for the procedure on how to use this feature. Source MAC Filtering If you want to reduce outgoing traffic to prevent 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. 9-4 Firewall and Network Management v1.0, October 2008

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ProSafe Wireless-N VPN Firewall SRXN3205 Reference Manual
9-4
Firewall and Network Management
v1.0, October 2008
See
“Managing Groups and Hosts (LAN Groups)” on page 3-4
for the procedure on how to use
this feature.
Schedule
If you have set firewall rules on the Rules screen, you can configure three different schedules (for
example, schedule 1, schedule 2, and schedule 3) for when a rule is to be applied. Once a schedule
is configured, it affects all Rules that use this schedule. You specify the days of the week and time
of day for each schedule.
See
“Setting Schedules to Block or Allow Traffic” on page 5-17
for the procedure on how to use
this feature.
Block Sites
If you want to reduce traffic by preventing access to certain sites on the Internet, you can use the
VPN firewall’s filtering feature. By default, this feature is disabled; all requested traffic from any
Web site is allowed.
Keyword (and Domain Name) Blocking.
You can specify up to 32 words that, should they
appear in the Web site name (i.e., URL) or in a newsgroup name, will cause that site or
newsgroup to be blocked by the VPN firewall.
You can apply the keywords to one or more groups. Requests from the PCs in the groups for
which keyword blocking has been enabled will be blocked. Blocking does not occur for the
PCs that are in the groups for which keyword blocking has not been enabled.
You can bypass keyword blocking for trusted domains by adding the exact matching domain
to the list of Trusted Domains. Access to the domains on this list by PCs even in the groups for
which keyword blocking has been enabled will still be allowed without any blocking.
Web Component blocking.
You can block the following Web component types: Proxy, Java,
ActiveX, and Cookies. Sites on the Trusted Domains list are still subject to Web component
blocking when the blocking of a particular Web component has been enabled.
See
“Setting Block Sites (Content Filtering)” on page 5-18
for the procedure on how to use this
feature.
Source MAC Filtering
If you want to reduce outgoing traffic to prevent 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.