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Chapter 27 Maintenance
ZyWALL 2WG User’s Guide
518
For example, if a bridge receives a frame via port 1 from host A (MAC address
00a0c5123478), the bridge associates host A with port 1. When the bridge receives another
frame on one of its ports with destination address 00a0c5123478, it forwards the frame
directly through port 1 after checking the internal table.
The bridge takes one of these actions after it checks the destination address of an incoming
frame with its internal table:
• If the table contains an association between the destination address and any of the bridge's
ports aside from the one on which the frame was received, the frame is forwarded out the
associated port.
• If no association is found, the frame is flooded to all ports except the inbound port.
Broadcasts and multicasts also are flooded in this way.
• If the associated port is the same as the incoming port, then the frame is dropped (filtered).
27.7 Transparent Firewalls
A transparent firewall (also known as a transparent, in-line, shadow, stealth or bridging
firewall) has the following advantages over “router firewalls”:
1
The use of a bridging firewall reduces configuration and deployment time because no
networking configuration changes to your existing network (hosts, neighboring routers
and the firewall itself) are needed. Just put it in-line with the network it is protecting. As
it only moves frames between ports (after inspecting them), it is completely transparent.
2
Performance is improved as there's less processing overhead.
3
As a transparent bridge does not modify the frames it forwards, it is effectively “stealth”
as it is invisible to attackers.
Bridging devices are most useful in complex environments that require a rapid or new firewall
deployment. A transparent, bridging firewall can also be good for companies with several
branch offices since the setups at these offices are often the same and it's likely that one design
can be used for many of the networks. A bridging firewall could be configured at HQ, sent to
the branches and then installed directly without additional configuration.
27.8 Configuring Device Mode (Router)
Click
MAINTENANCE
>
Device Mode
to open the following screen. Use this screen to
configure your ZyWALL as a router or a bridge.
In router mode, the ZyWALL functions as a router. The ZyWALL routes traffic traveling
between the ZyWALL's interfaces and filters and inspects packets.
In router mode, the ZyWALL can get an IP address from a DHCP server. It can also serve as a
DHCP server to assign IP addresses to your local computers. The LAN, WAN, DMZ and
WLAN interfaces all have different IP addresses. The ZyWALL also provides NAT, port
forwarding, policy routing, and DNS in router mode. These features allow you to set up
private network. See
in the user’s guide for a detailed list of other features
available in router mode.
The following applies when the ZyWALL is in router mode.
Summary of Contents for ZYWALL 2 WG
Page 2: ......
Page 8: ...Safety Warnings ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 8 ...
Page 42: ...List of Figures ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 42 ...
Page 50: ...List of Tables ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 50 ...
Page 52: ...52 ...
Page 80: ...Chapter 2 Introducing the Web Configurator ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 80 ...
Page 100: ...Chapter 3 Wizard Setup ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 100 ...
Page 140: ...Chapter 4 Tutorial ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 140 ...
Page 146: ...146 ...
Page 158: ...Chapter 6 LAN Screens ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 158 ...
Page 171: ...Chapter 8 WAN Screens ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 171 Figure 108 NETWORK WAN General ...
Page 200: ...Chapter 8 WAN Screens ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 200 ...
Page 238: ...238 ...
Page 300: ...Chapter 13 Content Filtering Reports ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 300 ...
Page 348: ...Chapter 14 IPSec VPN ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 348 ...
Page 378: ...Chapter 15 Certificates ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 378 ...
Page 384: ...384 ...
Page 426: ...Chapter 20 Bandwidth Management ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 426 ...
Page 479: ...479 PART V Logs and Maintenance Logs Screens 481 Maintenance 511 ...
Page 480: ...480 ...
Page 485: ...Chapter 26 Logs Screens ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 485 Figure 304 LOGS Log Settings ...
Page 510: ...Chapter 26 Logs Screens ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 510 ...
Page 530: ...530 ...
Page 558: ...Chapter 30 WAN and Dial Backup Setup ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 558 ...
Page 564: ...Chapter 31 LAN Setup ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 564 ...
Page 570: ...Chapter 32 Internet Access ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 570 ...
Page 574: ...Chapter 33 DMZ Setup ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 574 ...
Page 578: ...Chapter 34 Route Setup ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 578 ...
Page 582: ...Chapter 35 Wireless Setup ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 582 ...
Page 594: ...Chapter 37 IP Static Route Setup ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 594 ...
Page 614: ...Chapter 38 Network Address Translation NAT ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 614 ...
Page 632: ...Chapter 40 Filter Configuration ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 632 ...
Page 668: ...Chapter 44 System Maintenance Menus 8 to 10 ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 668 ...
Page 672: ...Chapter 45 Remote Management ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 672 ...
Page 680: ...Chapter 46 IP Policy Routing ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 680 ...
Page 686: ...686 ...
Page 692: ...Chapter 48 Troubleshooting ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 692 ...
Page 702: ...Chapter 49 Product Specifications ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 702 ...
Page 704: ...704 ...
Page 712: ...Appendix A Pop up Windows JavaScripts and Java Permissions ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 712 ...
Page 740: ...Appendix D Common Services ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 740 ...
Page 768: ...Appendix G Legal Information ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 768 ...
Page 774: ...Appendix H Customer Support ZyWALL 2WG User s Guide 774 ...