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Chapter 15 Firewall
PMG5318-B20A User’s Guide
128
15.1.2 What You Need to Know About Firewall
SYN Attack
A SYN attack floods a targeted system with a series of SYN packets. Each packet causes the
targeted system to issue a SYN-ACK response. While the targeted system waits for the ACK that
follows the SYN-ACK, it queues up all outstanding SYN-ACK responses on a backlog queue. SYN-
ACKs are moved off the queue only when an ACK comes back or when an internal timer terminates
the three-way handshake. Once the queue is full, the system will ignore all incoming SYN requests,
making the system unavailable for legitimate users.
DoS
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 GPON Device is pre-configured to automatically detect and
thwart all known DoS attacks.
DDoS
A Distributed DoS (DDoS) attack is one in which multiple compromised systems attack a single
target, thereby causing denial of service for users of the targeted system.
LAND Attack
In a Local Area Network Denial (LAND) attack, hackers flood SYN packets into the network with a
spoofed source IP address of the target system. This makes it appear as if the host computer sent
the packets to itself, making the system unavailable while the target system tries to respond to
itself.
Ping of Death
Ping of Death uses a "ping" utility to create and send an IP packet that exceeds the maximum
65,536 bytes of data allowed by the IP specification. This may cause systems to crash, hang or
reboot.
SPI
Stateful Packet Inspection (SPI) tracks each connection crossing the firewall and makes sure it is
valid. Filtering decisions are based not only on rules but also context. For example, traffic from the
WAN may only be allowed to cross the firewall in response to a request from the LAN.
RFC 4890 SPEC Traffic
RFC 4890 specifies the filtering policies for ICMPv6 messages. This is important for protecting
against security threats including DoS, probing, redirection attacks and renumbering attacks that
can be carried out through ICMPv6. Since ICMPv6 error messages are critical for establishing and
maintaining communications, filtering policy focuses on ICMPv6 informational messages.
Summary of Contents for PMG5318-B20A
Page 8: ...Table of Contents PMG5318 B20A User s Guide 8 ...
Page 14: ...Chapter 1 Introduction PMG5318 B20A User s Guide 14 ...
Page 20: ...Chapter 2 The Web Configurator PMG5318 B20A User s Guide 20 ...
Page 44: ...Chapter 5 LAN PMG5318 B20A User s Guide 44 ...
Page 70: ...Chapter 6 Wireless LAN PMG5318 B20A User s Guide 70 ...
Page 80: ...Chapter 8 Quality of Service QoS PMG5318 B20A User s Guide 80 ...
Page 96: ...Chapter 10 Phone Usage PMG5318 B20A User s Guide 96 ...
Page 102: ...Chapter 11 USB Services PMG5318 B20A User s Guide 102 ...
Page 117: ...Chapter 12 Remote Management PMG5318 B20A User s Guide 117 ...
Page 118: ...Chapter 12 Remote Management PMG5318 B20A User s Guide 118 ...
Page 122: ...Chapter 13 Static Route PMG5318 B20A User s Guide 122 ...
Page 126: ...Chapter 14 Dynamic DNS PMG5318 B20A User s Guide 126 ...
Page 144: ...Chapter 17 Logs PMG5318 B20A User s Guide 144 ...
Page 150: ...Chapter 19 Diagnostic PMG5318 B20A User s Guide 150 ...
Page 164: ...Appendix B Legal Information PMG5318 B20A User s Guide 164 ...