Chapter 10 Firewalls
P-660HWP-Dx User’s Guide
37
10.3.1 Denial of Service Attacks
Figure 92
Firewall Application
10.4 Denial of Service
Denials of Service (DoS) attacks are aimed at devices and networks with a connection to the
Internet. Their goal is not to steal information, but to disable a device or network so users no
longer have access to network resources. The P-660HWP-Dx is pre-configured to
automatically detect and thwart all known DoS attacks.
10.4.1 Basics
Computers share information over the Internet using a common language called TCP/IP. TCP/
IP, in turn, is a set of application protocols that perform specific functions. An “extension
number”, called the "TCP port" or "UDP port" identifies these protocols, such as HTTP
(Web), FTP (File Transfer Protocol), POP3 (E-mail), etc. For example, Web traffic by default
uses TCP port 80.
When computers communicate on the Internet, they are using the client/server model, where
the server "listens" on a specific TCP/UDP port for information requests from remote client
computers on the network. For example, a Web server typically listens on port 80. Please note
that while a computer may be intended for use over a single port, such as Web on port 80,
other ports are also active. If the person configuring or managing the computer is not careful, a
hacker could attack it over an unprotected port.
Some of the most common IP ports are:
Table 55
Common IP Ports
21
FTP
53
DNS
23
Telnet
80
HTTP
25
SMTP
110
POP3
Summary of Contents for 802.11g HomePlug AV ADSL2+ Gateway P-660HWP-Dx
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Page 7: ...Safety Warnings P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 39 ...
Page 8: ...Safety Warnings P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 40 ...
Page 10: ...Contents Overview P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 36 ...
Page 20: ...Table of Contents P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 44 ...
Page 32: ...List of Tables P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 40 ...
Page 33: ...35 PART I Introduction Introducing the P 660HWP Dx 35 Introducing the Web Configurator 43 ...
Page 34: ...36 ...
Page 42: ...Chapter 1 Introducing the P 660HWP Dx P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 42 ...
Page 56: ...Chapter 2 Introducing the Web Configurator P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 48 ...
Page 58: ...36 ...
Page 78: ...Chapter 4 Bandwidth Management Wizard P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 54 ...
Page 80: ...36 ...
Page 98: ...Chapter 5 WAN Setup P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 52 ...
Page 142: ...Chapter 8 Powerline P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 42 ...
Page 156: ...36 ...
Page 176: ...Chapter 11 Firewall Configuration P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 54 Figure 99 Firewall Edit Rule ...
Page 190: ...Chapter 11 Firewall Configuration P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 68 ...
Page 194: ...Chapter 12 Content Filtering P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 72 ...
Page 218: ...36 ...
Page 222: ...Chapter 14 Static Route P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 38 ...
Page 238: ...Chapter 16 Dynamic DNS Setup P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 38 ...
Page 250: ...Chapter 17 Remote Management Configuration P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 46 ...
Page 262: ...Chapter 18 Universal Plug and Play UPnP P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 58 ...
Page 264: ...36 ...
Page 270: ...Chapter 19 System P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 40 ...
Page 288: ...Chapter 20 Logs P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 52 ...
Page 294: ...Chapter 21 Tools P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 40 ...
Page 304: ...36 ...
Page 340: ...Appendix C Internal SPTGEN P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 50 ...
Page 364: ...Appendix E IP Subnetting P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 42 ...
Page 368: ...Appendix F Command Interpreter P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 38 ...
Page 388: ...Appendix K Legal Information P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 38 ...
Page 394: ...Appendix L Customer Support P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 40 ...
Page 402: ...Index P 660HWP Dx User s Guide 42 ...