54
Port Range
The range of ports to be forward to the private IP.
Comment
The description of this setting.
Add Port Forwarding into the table
Fill in the "IP Address", “Protocol”, “Port Range”
and "Comment" of the setting to be added and
then click "Apply". Then this Port Forwarding
setting will be added into the "Current Port
Forwarding Table" below. If you find any typo
before adding it and want to retype again, just
click "Cancel" and the fields will be cleared.
Remove Port Forwarding into the table
If you want to remove some Port Forwarding
settings from the "Current Port Forwarding
Table", select the Port Forwarding settings you
want to remove in the table and then click
"Delete Selected". If you want remove all Port
Forwarding settings from the table, just click
"Delete All" button. Click "Reset" will clear your
current selections.
Click <
Apply>
at the bottom of the screen to save the above configurations. You can now
configure other advance sections or start using the router (with the advance settings in place)
2.5.5 DMZ
If you have a local client PC that cannot run an Internet application (e.g. Games) properly from
behind the NAT firewall, then you can open the client up to unrestricted two-way Internet access
by defining a DMZ Host. The DMZ function allows you to re-direct all packets going to your WAN
port IP address to a particular IP address in your LAN. The difference between the virtual server
and the DMZ function is that the virtual server re-directs a particular service/Internet application
(e.g. FTP, websites) to a particular LAN client/server, whereas DMZ re-directs all packets
(regardless of services) going to your WAN IP address to a particular LAN client/server.