D LINK DFL 200 User Manual

D-Link DFL-200  
TM  
Network Security Firewall  
Manual  
Building Networks for People  
(04/18/2005)  
 
4
Introduction  
The DFL-200 provides six 10/100Mbps Auto MDI/MDIX Ethernet network interface ports,  
which are (4) Internal/LAN, (1) External/WAN, and (1) DMZ port. In addition the DFL-200 also  
provides a user-friendly Web UI that allows users to set system parameters or monitor  
network activities using a Web browser supporting Java.  
Features and Benefits  
z Firewall Security  
z VPN Server/Client Supported  
Supports IPSec LAN-to-LAN or Roaming user tunnels with AES  
encryption in addition to PPTP and IPSec over L2TP  
z Content Filtering  
Strip ActiveX objects, Java Applets, JavaScript, and VBScript from  
HTTP traffic  
z Web Management  
Configurable through any networked computer’s Web browser using  
Netscape or Internet Explorer.  
z Access Control supported  
Allows assignment of different access rights for different users, such  
as Admin or Read-Only User.  
Introduction to Firewalls  
A firewall is a device that sits between your computer and the Internet that prevents  
unauthorized access to or from your network. A firewall can be a computer using firewall  
software or a special piece of hardware built specifically to act as a firewall. In most  
circumstances, a firewall is used to prevent unauthorized Internet users from accessing  
private networks or corporate LAN’s and Intranets. Firewalls are also deployed to prevent  
sensitive information about your network from leaking out of your network.  
A firewall monitors all of the information moving to and from your network and analyzes  
each piece of data. Each piece of data is then checked against a set of criteria configured by  
the administrator. If any data does not meet the criteria, that data is blocked and discarded. If  
the data meets the criteria, the data is passed through. This method is called packet filtering.  
A firewall can also run specific security functions based on the type of application or type  
of port that is being used. For example, a firewall can be configured to work with an FTP or  
Telnet server. Or a firewall can be configured to work with specific UDP or TCP ports to allow  
certain applications or games to work properly over the Internet.  
6
 
Introduction to Local Area Networking  
Local Area Networking (LAN) is the term used when connecting several computers  
together over a small area such as a building or group of buildings. LANs can be connected  
over large areas. A collection of LANs connected over a large area is called a Wide Area  
Network (WAN).  
A LAN consists of multiple computers connected to each other. There are many types of  
media that can connect computers together. The most common media is CAT5 cable (UTP or  
STP twisted pair wire.) On the other hand, wireless networks do not use wires; instead they  
communicate over radio waves. Each computer must have a Network Interface Card (NIC),  
which communicates the data between computers. A NIC is usually a 10Mbps network card,  
or 10/100Mbps network card, or a wireless network card.  
Most networks use hardware devices such as hubs or switches that each cable can be  
connected to in order to continue the connection between computers. A hub simply takes any  
data arriving through each port and forwards the data to all other ports. A switch is more  
sophisticated, in that a switch can determine the destination port for a specific piece of data.  
A switch minimizes network traffic overhead and speeds up the communication over a  
network.  
Networks take some time in order to plan and implement correctly. There are many ways  
to configure your network. You may want to take some time to determine the best network  
set-up for your needs.  
 
LEDs  
Power: A solid light indicates a proper connection to the power supply.  
Status: A System status indicator that flashes occasionally to indicate a functional, active  
system. Solid illumination of the Status LED indicates a hardware/software critical failure.  
WAN, 4 x LAN, & DMZ: Bright Green illumination indicates a valid Ethernet Link on that  
respective port. Each LED will flicker when that respective port is sending or receiving  
data.  
Physical Connections  
COM Port: Serial Read-Only access to the firewall software from a PC equipped with a  
Serial COM port (9600 baud, 8 data bits, No Parity, 1 Stop bit, No Flow Control).  
4 x LAN Port: Use these ports to connect PC’s directly or to connect to Fast Ethernet  
Switches to service more than 4 client PCs on the internal office network.  
DMZ Port: Use this port to service an additional physically segmented Private or  
Transparent Network to be occupied by WAN accessible servers (FTP, HTTP, DNS).  
WAN Port: Use this port to connect to an external network, such as a WAN or a modem  
provided by an ISP.  
Reset: Use this switch to reset the DFL-200 to factory default settings. Refer to page 63  
for further instructions.  
DC Power: Use the included 5VDC 3A switching power supply to connect to an  
110/120VAC electrical receptacle. Do not use less than 5VDC 3A to power the device,  
doing so will damage the unit.  
8
 
Package Contents  
Contents of Package:  
D-Link DFL-200 Firewall  
Manual and CD  
Quick Installation Guide  
5V/3A AC Power adapter  
Straight-through CAT-5 cable  
RS-232 Null Modem Cable  
Note: Using a power supply with a different voltage rating than the one included  
with the DFL-200 will cause irreparable electrical damage and void the warranty  
for this product.  
If any of the above items are missing, please contact your reseller.  
System Requirements  
Computer running Microsoft Windows, Macintosh OS, or a UNIX based operating  
system with an installed Ethernet adapter configured to communicate using TCP/IP.  
Internet Explorer or Netscape Navigator, version 6.0 or above, with JavaScript  
enabled.  
 
Managing D-Link DFL-200  
When  
made to the configuration,  
new icon named  
a
change is  
a
Activate Changes will  
appear. When all changes  
made by the administrator  
are  
complete,  
those  
changes need to be saved  
and activated to take  
effect by clicking on the  
Activate Changes button  
on  
the  
Activate  
Configuration  
Changes  
page. The firewall will  
save the configuration and  
reload it, making the new  
changes take effect. In  
order  
to  
make  
the  
changes permanent, the  
administrator must login  
again. This has to be done before a configurable timeout has been reached, otherwise the  
DFL-200 will revert to the previous configuration. The timeout can be set on the Activate  
Configuration Changes page, by choosing the time from the dropdown menu.  
Resetting the DFL-200  
To reset the DFL-200 to factory default settings simply press down and hold the reset  
button for 15 seconds with the unit powered on. The Power light will go out, which will indicate  
that the device is restarting with factory default settings. After this the DFL-200 will continue to  
load and startup in default mode, i.e. with 192.168.1.1 on the LAN interface.  
10  
 
Administration Settings  
Administrative Access  
Management UI Ports – The ports for the DFL-200’s Web Server Management UI (HTTP  
and HTTPS) can be customized if so desired. These values must change if User  
Authentication is enabled (User Authentication uses 80 and 443 to accomplish user login).  
Ping – If enabled, it specifies who can ping the IP interface of the DFL-200. Enabling  
Default allows anyone to ping the interface IP.  
Admin – If enabled, it allows all users with admin access to connect to the DFL-200 and  
change configuration; this can be HTTPS or HTTP and HTTPS.  
Read-Only – If enabled, it allows all users with read-only access to connect to the DFL-  
200 and look at the configuration; this can be HTTPS or HTTP and HTTPS. In the case  
where Read-Only access is the only type allowed on a specific interface, all users that log  
in to that interface will be in Read-Only mode.  
SNMP – Specifies if SNMP should or should not be allowed on the interface. The DFL-200  
only supports read-only access.  
 
Add ping access to an interface  
To add ping access click on the interface you would like to add it to.  
Follow these steps to add ping access to an interface.  
Step 1. Click on the interface you would like to add it to.  
Step 2. Enable the Ping checkbox.  
Step 3. Specify which network addresses should be allowed to ping the interface, for  
example 192.168.1.0/24 for a whole class C network or 172.16.0.1 – 172.16.0.10 for a  
range of IP addresses.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Example:  
Add Admin access to an interface  
To add admin access, click on the interface you would like to add it to. Only users with  
administrative rights can login on interfaces where there is only admin access enabled.  
Follow these steps to add admin access to an interface.  
Step 1. Click on the interface you would like to add it to.  
Step 2. Enable the Admin checkbox.  
Step 3. Specify which network addresses should be allowed to access the administrative  
interface, for example 192.168.1.0/24 for a whole class C network or 172.16.0.1 –  
172.16.0.10 for a range of IP addresses.  
Step 4. Specify protocol to be used to access the DFL-200 via the dropdown menu.  
Select HTTP and HTTPS (Secure HTTP) or HTTPS only.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Example:  
12  
 
Add Read-only access to an interface  
To add read-only access, click on the interface you would like to add it to. Note that if you  
only have read-only access enabled on an interface, all users will only have read-only access,  
even if they are administrators.  
Follow these steps to add read-only access to an interface.  
Step 1. Click on the interface you would like to add it to.  
Step 2. Enable the Read-only checkbox.  
Step 3. Specify which network addresses should be allowed read-only access to the  
interface, for example 192.168.1.0/24 for a whole class C network or 172.16.0.1 –  
172.16.0.10 for a range of IP addresses.  
Step 4. Specify protocol to be used to access the DFL-200 via the dropdown menu.  
Select HTTP and HTTPS (Secure HTTP) or HTTPS only.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Example:  
Enable SNMP access to an interface  
Follow these steps to add read-only SNMP access to an interface.  
Step 1. Click on the interface you would like to add it to.  
Step 2. Enable the Read-only checkbox.  
Step 3. Specify which network addresses should be allowed to receive SNMP traps, for  
example 192.168.1.0/24 for a whole class C network or 172.16.0.1 – 172.16.0.10 for a  
range of IP addresses.  
Step 4. Specify the community string used to authenticate the DFL-200.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Example:  
 
System  
Interfaces  
Click on System in the menu bar, and then click interfaces below it.  
Change IP of the LAN or DMZ interface  
Follow these steps to change the IP of the LAN or DMZ interface.  
Step 1. Choose which interface to view or change under the Available interfaces list.  
Step 2. Fill in the IP address of the LAN or DMZ interface. These are the addresses that  
will be used to ping the firewall, remotely control it, and used as the gateway for the  
internal hosts or DMZ hosts.  
Step 3. Choose the correct Subnet mask of this interface from the drop down menu. This  
configuration will determine the IP addresses that can communicate with this interface.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Please keep in mind that the DHCP scope will also need to be changed to correspond with  
the new LAN IP. If the computer through which the DFL-200 is being configured is a DHCP  
client, you will need to manually release and renew the IP address after applying changes and  
restarting. Failure to follow these directions will result in the firewall configuration reverting  
back to the state prior to changing the LAN IP.  
14  
 
WAN Interface Settings – Using Static IP  
If you are using Static IP, you have  
to fill in the IP address information  
provided to you by your ISP. All fields  
are required except the Secondary DNS  
Server. Note: Do not use the numbers  
displayed in these fields, they are only  
used as an example.  
IP Address  
address of the WAN  
The IP  
interface. This is the  
address that may be used  
to ping the firewall, remotely control it, and be used as the source address for  
dynamically translated connections.  
Subnet Mask – Size of the external network.  
Gateway IP – Specifies the IP address of the default gateway used to access the  
Internet.  
Primary and Secondary DNS Server – The IP addresses of your DNS servers;  
only the Primary DNS is required.  
WAN Interface Settings – Using DHCP  
If you are using DHCP, there is no  
need to complete any fields.  
 
WAN Interface Settings – Using PPPoE  
Use the following procedure to  
configure the DFL-200 external  
interface to use PPPoE (Point-to-Point  
Protocol  
over  
Ethernet).  
This  
configuration is required if your ISP  
uses PPPoE to assign the IP address  
of the external interface. You will have  
to fill in the username and password  
provided to you by your ISP.  
Username – The login or  
username supplied to you  
by your ISP.  
Password  
password supplied to you by your ISP.  
The  
Service Name – When using PPPoE some ISPs require you to fill in a Service  
Name.  
Primary and Secondary DNS Server – The IP addresses of your DNS servers;  
these are optional and are often provided by the PPPoE service.  
16  
 
WAN Interface Settings – Using PPTP  
PPTP over Ethernet connections  
are used in some DSL and cable  
modem networks.  
You need to enter your account  
details, and possibly also IP  
configuration parameters of the  
actual physical interface that the  
PPTP tunnel runs over. Your ISP  
should supply this information.  
Username – The login  
or username supplied  
to you by your ISP.  
Password  
The  
password supplied to  
you by your ISP.  
PPTP Server IP – The  
IP of the PPTP server  
that the DFL-200 will  
connect to.  
Before PPTP can be used to connect to your ISP, the physical (WAN) interface  
parameters must be input. You can use either DHCP or Static IP, depending on the type of  
ISP used. Your ISP should supply this information.  
If using static IP, this information needs to be filled in.  
IP Address – The IP address of the WAN interface. This IP is used to connect to  
the PPTP server.  
Subnet Mask – Size of the external network.  
Gateway IP – Specifies the IP address of the default gateway used to access the  
Internet.  
 
WAN Interface Settings – Using L2TP  
L2TP over Ethernet connections  
are used in some DSL and cable  
modem networks.  
You need to enter your account  
details, and possibly also IP  
configuration parameters of the  
actual physical interface that the  
L2TP tunnel runs over. Your ISP  
should supply this information.  
Username – The login  
or username supplied  
to you by your ISP.  
Password  
The  
password supplied to  
you by your ISP.  
L2TP Server IP – The  
IP of the L2TP server  
that the DFL-200 will  
connect to.  
Before L2TP can be used to connect to your ISP, the physical (WAN) interface parameters  
must be input. You can use either DHCP or Static IP, depending on the type of ISP used.  
Your ISP should supply this information.  
If using static IP, this information needs to be filled in.  
IP Address – The IP address of the WAN interface. This IP is used to connect to  
the L2TP server.  
Subnet Mask – Size of the external network.  
Gateway IP – Specifies the IP address of the default gateway used to access the  
Internet. Contact your ISP if you are unsure of the necessity of this information.  
18  
 
WAN Interface Settings – Using BigPond  
The ISP Telstra BigPond uses  
BigPond for authentication; the IP is  
assigned with DHCP.  
Username – The login  
or username supplied to  
you by your ISP.  
Password  
password supplied to  
you by your ISP.  
The  
MTU Configuration  
To improve the performance of your Internet connection, you can adjust the maximum  
transmission unit (MTU) of the packets that the DFL-200 transmits from its external interface.  
Ideally, you want this MTU to be the same as the smallest MTU of all the networks between  
the DFL-200 and the Internet. If the packets the DFL-200 sends are larger, they get broken up  
or fragmented, which could slow down transmission speeds.  
Trial and error is the only sure way of finding the optimal MTU, but there are some  
guidelines that can help. For example, the MTU of many PPP connections is 576, so if you  
connect to the Internet via PPPoE, you may want to set the MTU size to this value. DSL  
modems may also have small MTU sizes. Most Ethernet networks have an MTU of 1500.  
Note: If you connect to your ISP using DHCP to obtain an IP address for the external  
interface, you cannot set the MTU below 576 bytes due to DHCP communication  
standards.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
 
Routing  
Click on System in the menu bar, and then click Routing below it; this will provide a list of  
all configured routes, and it will look something like this:  
The Routes configuration section describes the firewall’s routing table. The DFL-200 uses  
a slightly different method of describing routes compared to most other systems. However, we  
believe that this method of describing routes is easier to understand, making it less likely for  
users to cause errors or breaches in security.  
Interface – Specifies which interface packets destined for this route shall be sent through.  
Network – Specifies the network address for this route.  
Gateway – Specifies the IP address of the next router hop used to reach the destination  
network. If the network is directly connected to the firewall interface, no gateway address is  
specified.  
Additional IP Address – The IP address specified here will be automatically published on  
the corresponding interface. This address will also be used as the sender address in ARP  
queries. If no address is specified, the interface IP address of the firewall will be used.  
Proxy ARP – Specifies that the firewall shall publish this route via Proxy ARP.  
One advantage with this form of notation is that you can specify a gateway for a particular  
route, without having a route that covers the gateway’s IP address or despite the fact that the  
route that covers the gateway’s IP address is normally routed via another interface.  
The major difference between this form of notation and the form most commonly used is  
there is no need to specify the interface name in a separate column. Instead, you specify the  
IP address of each interface as a gateway.  
Note: Proxy ARP will publish the remote network on all interfaces (except WAN) if  
enabled on the VPN tunnel.  
20  
 
Add a new Static Route  
Follow these steps to add a new route.  
Step 1. Go to System and Routing.  
Step 2. Click on Add new in the bottom of the routing table.  
Step 3. Choose the interface that the route should be sent through from the dropdown  
menu.  
Step 4. Specify the Network and Subnet mask.  
Step 5. If this network is behind a remote gateway, enable the checkbox Network is  
behind remote gateway and specify the IP of that gateway.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Remove a Static Route  
Follow these steps to remove a route.  
Step 1. Go to System and Routing.  
Step 2. Click the Edit corresponding to the route you would like to remove.  
Step 3. Check the checkbox named Delete this route.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
 
Logging  
Click on System in the menu bar, and then click Logging below it.  
Logging, the ability to audit decisions made by the firewall, is a vital part in all network  
security products. The D-Link DFL-200 provides several options for logging activity. The D-  
Link DFL-200 logs activity by sending the log data to one or two log receivers in the network.  
All logging is done to SYSLog recipients. The log format used for SYSLog logging is  
suitable for automated processing and searching.  
22  
 
The D-Link DFL-200 specifies a number of events that can be logged. Some of these  
events, such as startup and shutdown, are mandatory and will always generate log entries.  
Other events, for instance when allowed connections are opened and closed, are configurable.  
It is also possible to have E-mail alerting for IDS/IDP events to up to three email addresses.  
Enable Logging  
Follow these steps to enable logging.  
Step 1. Enable SYSLog by checking the SYSLog box.  
Step 2. Fill in your first SYSLog server as SYSLog server 1. If you have two SYSLog  
servers, you have to fill in the second one as SYSLog server 2. You must fill in at least  
one SYSLog server for logging to work.  
Step 3. Specify what facility to use by selecting the appropriate SYSLog facility. Local0 is  
the default facility.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Enable Audit Logging  
To start auditing all traffic through the firewall, follow the steps below. This is required  
when running third party log analyzers on the logs or to see how much traffic specific  
connections account for.  
Follow these steps to enable auditing.  
Step 1. Enable SYSLog by checking the Enable Audit Logging box.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Enable E-mail alerting for IDS/IDP events  
Follow these steps to enable E-mail alerting.  
Step 1. Enable E-mail alerting by checking the Enable E-mail alerting for IDS/IDP  
events checkbox.  
Step 2. Choose the sensitivity level.  
Step 3. In the SMTP Server field, fill in the SMTP server to which the DFL-200 will send  
the e-mail alerts.  
Step 4. Specify up to three valid email addresses to receive the e-mail alerts.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
 
Time  
Click on System in the menu bar, and then click Time below it. This will give you the  
option to either set the system time by synchronizing with an Internet Network Time Server  
(NTP) or by entering the system time manually.  
24  
 
Changing time zone  
Follow these steps to change the time zone.  
Step 1. Choose the correct time zone in the drop down menu.  
Step 2. Specify the dates to begin and end daylight saving time or choose no daylight  
saving time by checking the correct box.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Using NTP to sync time  
Follow these steps to sync to an Internet Time Server.  
Step 1. Enable synchronization by checking the Enable NTP box.  
Step 2. Enter the Server IP Address or Server name with which you want to synchronize.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Setting time and date manually  
Follow these steps to manually set the system time.  
Step 1. Check the Set the system time box.  
Step 2. Select the correct date.  
Step 3. Set the correct time using the 24-hour format.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
 
Firewall  
Policy  
The Firewall Policy configuration section is the "heart" of the firewall. The policies are the  
primary filter that is configured to allow or disallow certain types of network traffic through the  
firewall. The policies also regulate how bandwidth management, traffic shaping, is applied to  
traffic flowing through the WAN interface of the firewall.  
When a new connection is being established through the firewall, the policies are  
evaluated, top to bottom, until a policy that matches the new connection is found. The Action  
of the rule is then carried out. If the action is Allow, the connection will be established and a  
state representing the connection is added to the firewall's internal state table. If the action is  
Drop, the new connection will be refused. The section below will explain the meanings of the  
various action types available.  
Policy modes  
The first step in configuring security policies is to configure the mode for the firewall. The  
firewall can run in NAT or No NAT (Route) mode. Select NAT mode to use DFL-200 network  
address translation to protect private networks from public networks. In NAT mode, you can  
connect a private network to the internal interface, a DMZ network to the DMZ interface, and a  
public network, such as the Internet, to the external interface. Then you can create NAT mode  
policies to accept or deny connections between these networks. NAT mode policies hide the  
addresses of the internal and DMZ networks from users on the Internet. In No NAT (Route)  
mode you can also create routed policies between interfaces. Route mode policies accept or  
deny connections between networks without performing address translation. To use NAT  
mode select Hide source addresses (many-to-one NAT) and to use No NAT (Route) mode  
choose No NAT.  
Action Types  
Drop – Packets matching Drop rules will immediately be dropped. Such packets will be  
logged if logging has been enabled in the Logging Settings page.  
Reject – Reject works basically the same way as Drop. In addition to this, the firewall  
sends an ICMP UNREACHABLE message back to the sender or, if the rejected packet was a  
TCP packet, a TCP RST message. Such packets will be logged if logging has been enabled  
in the Logging Settings page.  
Allow – Packets matching Allow rules are passed to the stateful inspection engine, which  
will remember that a connection has been opened. Therefore, rules for return traffic will not be  
required as traffic belonging to open connections is automatically dealt with before it reaches  
the policies. Logging is carried out if audit logging has been enabled in the Logging Settings  
page.  
Source and Destination Filter  
Source Nets – Specifies the sender span of IP addresses to be compared to the received  
packet. Leave this blank to match everything.  
26  
 
Source Users/Groups – Specifies if an authenticated username is needed for this policy  
to match. Simply make a list of usernames separated by commas (,), specify an entire user  
group, or write Any to indicate all authenticated users to enable authentication on this policy.  
If it is left blank there is no need for authentication for the policy.  
Destination Nets – Specifies the span of IP addresses to be compared to the destination  
IP of the received packet. Leave this blank to match everything.  
Destination Users/Groups – Specifies if an authenticated username is needed for this  
policy to match. Either make a list of usernames, separated by a comma (,) or write Any for  
any authenticated user. If it is left blank there is no need for authentication for the policy.  
Service Filter  
Either choose a predefined service from the dropdown menu or make a custom service.  
The following custom services exist:  
All – Matches all protocols.  
TCP+UDP+ICMP – This service matches all ports on either the TCP or the UDP protocol,  
including ICMP.  
Custom TCP This service is based on the TCP protocol.  
Custom UDP This service is based on the UDP protocol.  
Custom TCP+UDP This service uses both the TCP and UDP protocols.  
The following is used when making a custom service:  
Custom source/destination ports – For many services, a single destination port is  
sufficient. The source port used most often are all ports, 0-65535. The http service, for  
instance, uses destination port 80. A port range can also be used, meaning that a range 137-  
139 covers ports 137, 138, and 139. Multiple ranges or individual ports may also be entered,  
separated by commas. For instance, a service can be defined as having source ports 1024-  
65535 and destination ports 80-82, 90-92, and 95. In this case, a TCP or UDP packet with the  
destination port being one of 80, 81, 82, 90, 91, 92 or 95, and the source port being in the  
range 1024-65535, will match this service.  
Schedule  
If a schedule should be used for the policy, choose one from the dropdown menu. These  
are specified on the Schedules page. If the policy should always be active, choose Always  
from the dropdown menu.  
Intrusion Detection / Prevention  
The DFL-200 Intrusion Detection/Prevention System (IDS/IDP) is a real-time intrusion  
detection and prevention sensor that identifies and takes action against a wide variety of  
suspicious network activity. The IDS uses intrusion signatures, stored in the attack database,  
to identify the most common attacks. In response to an attack, the IDS will protect the  
networks behind the DFL-200 by dropping the traffic. To notify responsible parties of the  
malicious attack, the IDS will send e-mails to the system administrators if e-mail alerting is  
enabled and configured. D-Link updates the attack database periodically. There are two  
modes that can be configured, either Inspection Only or Prevention. Inspection Only will  
 
only inspect the traffic, and if the DFL-200 detects anything it will log, e-mail an alert (if  
configured), and pass on the traffic. If Prevention is used the traffic will be dropped and  
logged and if configured, an e-mail alert will be sent.  
Add a new policy  
Follow these steps to add a new outgoing policy.  
Step 1. Choose the LAN->WAN policy list from the available policy lists.  
Step 2. Click on the Add new link.  
Step 3. Fill in the following values:  
Name: Specifies a symbolic name for the rule. This name is used mainly as a rule  
reference in log data and for easy reference in the policy list.  
Position: Moves before given position.  
Action: Select Allow to allow the specified service traffic to traverse the firewall. Choose  
Deny to drop all traffic matching the criteria of the specified service.  
Source Nets: – Specifies the sender span of IP addresses to be compared to the  
received packet. Leave this blank to match everything.  
Source Users/Groups: Specifies if an authenticated username is needed for this policy to  
match. Either make a list of usernames, separated by a comma (,) or write Any for any  
authenticated user. If it is left blank there is no need for authentication for the policy.  
Destination Nets: Specifies the span of IP addresses to be compared to the destination  
IP of the received packet. Leave this blank to match everything.  
Destination Users/Groups: Specifies if an authenticated username is needed for this  
policy to match. Either make a list of usernames, separated by a comma (,) or write Any  
for any authenticated user. If it is left blank there is no need for authentication for the  
policy.  
Service: Either choose a predefined service from the dropdown menu or make a custom  
service.  
Schedule: Choose which schedule should be used for this policy to match. Choose  
Always for no scheduling.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the changes or click Cancel to discard changes.  
28  
 
Change order of policy  
Follow these steps to change the order of a policy.  
Step 1. Choose the policy list for which you would like to change the order from the  
available policy lists.  
Step 2. Click on the Edit link corresponding to the rule you want to move.  
Step 3. Change the number in the Position to the new line. This will occur after the apply  
button is clicked and will move the policy to the new row and move the old policy and all  
following policies one step down.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the changes or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Delete policy  
Follow these steps to delete a policy.  
Step 1. Choose the policy list from which you would like do delete the policy in from the  
available policy lists.  
Step 2. Click on the Edit link corresponding to the rule you want to delete.  
Step 3. Enable the Delete policy checkbox.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the changes or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Configure Intrusion Detection  
Follow these steps to configure IDS on a policy.  
Step 1. Choose the policy you would like to have IDS on.  
Step 2. Click on the Edit link corresponding to the rule you want to configure.  
Step 3. Enable the Intrusion Detection / Prevention checkbox.  
Step 4. Choose Inspection Only from the mode drop down list.  
Step 5. Enable the alerting checkbox for e-mail alerting.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the changes or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Configure Intrusion Prevention  
Follow these steps to configure IDP on a policy.  
Step 1. Choose the policy you would like have IDP on.  
Step 2. Click on the Edit link corresponding to the rule you want to configure.  
Step 3. Enable the Intrusion Detection / Prevention checkbox.  
Step 4. Choose Prevention from the mode drop down list.  
Step 5. Enable the alerting checkbox for e-mail alerting.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the changes or click Cancel to discard changes.  
 
Port mapping / Virtual Servers  
The Port mapping / Virtual Servers configuration section is where you can configure virtual  
servers (such as a LAN Web server) to allow WAN access to specified LAN or DMZ servers.  
It is also possible to use Intrusion Detection / Prevention on Port mapped services. These are  
applied in the same way as with policies. See the previous chapter for more information.  
Mappings are read from top to bottom, and the first matching mapping is carried out.  
Add a new mapping  
Follow these steps to add a new mapping on the WAN interface.  
Step 1. Click on the Add new link.  
Step 2. Fill in the following values:  
Name: Specifies a symbolic name for the rule. This name is used mainly as a rule  
reference in log data and for easy reference in the policy list.  
Source Nets: Specify the source networks, leave blank for everyone (0.0.0.0/0).  
Source Users/Groups: Specifies if an authenticated username is needed for this  
mapping to match. Either make a list of usernames, separated by a comma (,) or write  
Any for any authenticated user. If it is left blank there is no need for authentication for the  
policy.  
Destination IP: Leave empty to use the WAN IP of the firewall, or enter an additional IP  
address to be forwarded to the specified Pass To address.  
Service: Either choose a predefined service from the dropdown menu or make a custom  
service.  
Pass To: The IP of the server that the traffic should be passed to.  
Schedule: Choose which schedule should be used for this mapping to match. Choose  
Always for no scheduling.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the changes or click Cancel to discard changes.  
30  
 
Delete mapping  
Follow these steps to delete a mapping.  
Step 1. Choose the mapping list (WAN, LAN, or DMZ) you would like do delete the  
mapping from.  
Step 2. Click on the Edit link corresponding to the rule you want to delete.  
Step 3. Enable the Delete mapping checkbox.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the changes or click Cancel to discard changes.  
 
Administrative users  
Click on Firewall in the menu bar, and then click Users below it. This will display all the  
users. The first section links to the administrative user.  
The password for the admin account may be changed at any time, however the username  
admin cannot be altered.  
Change Administrative User Password  
To change the password of a user click on the user name and you will see the following  
screen.  
Follow these steps to change  
Administrative User password.  
Step 1. Click on the Administrator  
link to change the password.  
Step 2. Enable the Change  
password checkbox.  
Step 3. Enter the new password  
twice.  
Click the Apply button below to  
apply the settings or click Cancel to  
discard changes.  
Note: The password should be at least six characters long. The password can contain  
numbers (0-9) and upper and lower case letters (A-Z, a-z). Special characters and spaces  
are not allowed.  
32  
 
Users  
User Authentication allows an administrator to grant or reject access to specific users from  
specific IP addresses, based on their user credentials.  
Before any traffic is allowed to pass through any policies configured with username or  
groups, the user must first authenticate him/her-self. The DFL-200 can either verify the user  
against a local database or pass along the user information to an external authentication  
server, which verifies the user and the given password, and transmits the result back to the  
firewall. If the authentication is successful, the DFL-200 will remember the source IP address  
of this user, and any matching policies with usernames or groups configured will be allowed.  
Specific policies that deal with user authentication can be defined, thus leaving policies that  
do not require user authentication unaffected.  
The DFL-200 supports the RADIUS (Remote Authentication Dial In User Service)  
authentication protocol. This protocol is heavily used in many scenarios where user  
authentication is required, either by itself or as a front-end to other authentication services.  
The DFL-200 RADIUS Support  
The DFL-200 can use RADIUS to verify users against, for example, Active Directory or  
Unix password-file. It is possible to configure up to two servers, if the first one is down it will  
try the second IP instead.  
The DFL-200 can use CHAP or PAP when communicating with the RADIUS server.  
CHAP (Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol) does not allow a remote attacker to  
extract the user password from an intercepted RADIUS packet. However, the password must  
be stored in plaintext on the RADIUS server. PAP (Password Authentication Protocol) may be  
defined as the less secure of the two. If a RADIUS packet is intercepted while being  
transmitted between the firewall and the RADIUS server, given time, the user password can  
be extracted. The advantage to this is that the password does not have to be stored in  
plaintext in the RADIUS server.  
The DFL-200 uses a shared secret when connecting to the RADIUS server. The shared  
secret enables basic encryption of the user password when the RADIUS-packet is transmitted  
from the firewall to the RADIUS server. The shared secret is case sensitive, can contain up to  
100 characters, and must be typed exactly the same on both the firewall and the RADIUS  
server.  
 
Enable User Authentication via HTTP / HTTPS  
Follow these steps to enable User Authentication.  
Step 1. Enable the checkbox for  
User Authentication.  
Step 2. Specify if HTTP and  
HTTPS or only HTTPS should  
be used for the login.  
Step 3. Specify the idle-timeout, the time a user can be idle before being logged out by the  
firewall.  
Step 4. Choose new ports for the web-based management GUI to listen on since enabling  
user authentication requires the default ports for user login purposes (80 and 443).  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Enable RADIUS Support  
Follow these steps to enable RADIUS  
support.  
Step 1. Enable the checkbox for  
RADIUS Support.  
Step 2. Enter information for up to  
two RADIUS servers.  
Step 3. Specify which mode to use, PAP or CHAP.  
Step 3. Specify the shared secret for this connection.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
34  
 
Add User  
Follow these steps to add a new user.  
Step 1. Click on add corresponding to  
the type of user you would like to add,  
Admin or Read-only.  
Step 2. Fill in User name; make sure  
you are not trying to add one that  
already exists.  
Step 3. Specify which groups the user  
should be a member of.  
Step 3. Specify the password for the  
new user.  
Click the Apply button below to apply  
the settings or click Cancel to discard  
changes.  
Note: The user name and password should be at least six characters long. The user  
name and password can contain numbers (0-9) and upper and lower case letters (A-Z, a-  
z). Special characters and spaces are not allowed.  
Change User Password  
To change the password of a user click on the user name and you will see the following  
screen.  
Follow these steps to change a user  
password.  
Step 1. Click on the user for which you  
would like to change the password.  
Step 2. Enable the Change password  
checkbox.  
Step 3. Enter the new password twice.  
Click the Apply button below to apply  
the settings or click Cancel to discard  
changes.  
Note: The password should be at least six characters long. The password can contain  
numbers (0-9) and upper and lower case letters (A-Z, a-z). Special characters and spaces  
are not allowed.  
 
Delete User  
To delete a user click on the user name and you will see the following screen.  
Follow these steps to delete a user.  
Step 1. Click on the user you would  
like to delete.  
Step 2. Enable the Delete user  
checkbox.  
Click the Apply button below to apply  
the settings or click Cancel to discard  
changes.  
Note: Deleting a user is irreversible; once the user is deleted, it cannot be  
undeleted.  
36  
 
Schedules  
It is possible to  
configure a schedule  
for policies to take  
effect. By creating a  
schedule, the DFL-  
200  
allows  
the  
firewall policies to be  
used only at those  
designated  
times.  
Any activities outside  
of the scheduled time  
slot will not follow the  
policies and therefore  
will not likely be  
permitted to pass  
through the firewall.  
The DFL-200 can be  
configured to have a  
start time and stop  
time, as well as 2  
different time periods  
in a day. For example,  
an organization may  
only want the firewall  
to allow the internal  
network users to  
access the Internet during work hours. Therefore, one may create a schedule to  
allow the firewall to allow traffic Monday-Friday, 8AM-5PM only. During the non-work  
hours, the firewall will not allow Internet access.  
Add new recurring schedule  
Follow these steps to add a new recurring schedule.  
Step 1. Go to Firewall and Schedules and choose Add new.  
Step 2. Enable the checkbox named Recurring scheduling.  
Step 3. Use the checkboxes to set the times this schedule should be active.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the changes or click Cancel to discard changes.  
 
Add new one-time schedule  
Follow these steps to create and add a new one-time schedule.  
Step 1. Go to Firewall and Schedules and choose Add new.  
Step 2. Choose the starting and ending date and hour when the schedule should be active.  
Step 3. Use the checkboxes to set the times this schedule should be active inside the  
specified timeframe.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the changes or click Cancel to discard changes.  
38  
 
Services  
A service is basically a definition of a specific IP protocol with corresponding parameters.  
The service http, for instance, is defined as using the TCP protocol with destination port 80.  
Services are simplistic, in that they cannot carry out any action in the firewall on their own.  
Thus, a service definition does not include any information whether the service should be  
allowed through the firewall or not. That decision is made entirely by the firewall policies, in  
which the service is used as a filter parameter.  
Adding TCP, UDP or TCP/UDP Service  
For many services, a single destination port is sufficient. The http service, for instance,  
uses destination port 80. To use a single destination port, enter the port number in the  
destination ports text box. In most cases, all ports (0-65535) have to be used as source ports.  
The second option is to define a port range; a port range is inclusive, meaning that a range  
137-139 covers ports 137, 138, and 139.  
Multiple ranges or individual ports may also be entered, separated by commas. For  
instance, a service can be defined as having source ports 1024-65535 and destination ports  
80-82, 90-92, and 95. In this case, a TCP or UDP packet with the destination port being one  
of 80, 81, 82, 90, 91, 92 or 95, and the source port being in the range 1024-65535, will match  
this service.  
Follow these steps to add a TCP, UDP, or TCP/UDP service.  
Step 1. Go to Firewall and Service and choose add new.  
Step 2. Enter a Name for the service in the name field. This name will appear in the  
service list when you add a new policy. The name can contain numbers (0-9) and upper  
and lower case letters (A-Z, a-z), and the special characters - and _. No other special  
characters and spaces are allowed.  
Step 3. Select TCP/UDP Service.  
Step 4. Select the protocol (TCP, UDP, or both TCP/UDP) used by the service.  
Step 5. Specify a source port or range for this service by typing in the low and high port  
numbers. Enter 0-65535 for all ports, or a single port like 80 for only one source port.  
Step 6. Specify a destination port or range for this service by typing in the low and high  
port numbers. Enter 0-65535 for all ports, or a single port like 80 for only one destination  
port.  
Step 7. Enable the SYN Relay checkbox if you want to protect the destination from SYN  
flood attacks.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the changes or click Cancel to discard changes.  
 
Adding IP Protocol  
When the type of the service is IP Protocol, an IP protocol number may be specified in the  
text field. To have the service match the GRE protocol, for example, the IP protocol should be  
specified as 47. A list of some defined IP protocols can be found in the appendix named “IP  
Protocol Numbers.”  
IP protocol ranges can be used to specify multiple IP protocols for one service. An IP  
protocol range is similar to the TCP and UDP port range described previously. The range 1-4,  
7 will match the protocols ICMP, IGMP, GGP, IP-in-IP, and CBT.  
Follow these steps to add a TCP, UDP, or TCP/UDP service.  
Step 1. Go to Firewall and Service and choose new.  
Step 2. Enter a Name for the service in the name field. This name will appear in the  
service list when you add a new policy. The name can contain numbers (0-9) and upper  
and lower case letters (A-Z, a-z), and the special characters - and _. No other special  
characters and spaces are allowed.  
Step 3. Select IP Protocol.  
Step 4. Specify a comma-separated list of IP protocols.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the changes or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Grouping Services  
Services can be grouped in order to simplify configuration. Consider a Web server using  
standard http as well as SSL encrypted http (https). Instead of having to create two separate  
rules allowing both types of services through the firewall, a service group named, for instance,  
Web, can be created, with the http and the https services as group members.  
Follow these steps to add a group.  
Step 1. Go to Firewall and Service and choose new.  
Step 2. Enter a Name for the service in the name field. This name will appear in the  
service list when you add a new policy. The name can contain numbers (0-9) and upper  
and lower case letters (A-Z, a-z), and the special characters - and _. No other special  
characters and spaces are allowed.  
Step 3. Select Group.  
Step 4. Specify a comma-separated list of existing services.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the changes or click Cancel to discard changes.  
40  
 
Protocol-independent settings  
Allow ICMP errors from the destination to the source – ICMP error messages are sent  
in several situations: for example, when an IP packet cannot reach its destination. The  
purpose of these error control messages is to provide feedback about problems in the  
communication environment.  
However, ICMP error messages and firewalls are usually not a very good combination; the  
ICMP error messages are initiated at the destination host (or a device within the path to the  
destination) and sent to the originating host. The result is that the ICMP error message will be  
interpreted by the firewall as a new connection and dropped, if not explicitly allowed by the  
firewall rule-set. It is generally not a good idea to allow any inbound ICMP message to be able  
to have those error messages forwarded.  
To solve this problem, the DFL-200 can be instructed to pass an ICMP error message only  
if it is related to an existing connection. Check this option to enable this feature for  
connections using this service.  
ALG – Similar to the way most stateful inspection firewalls behave, the DFL-200 filters  
only information found in packet headers, such as IP, TCP, UDP, or ICMP headers.  
In some situations though, filtering only header data is not sufficient. The FTP protocol, for  
instance, includes IP address and port information in the protocol payload. In these cases, the  
firewall needs to be able to examine the payload data and carry out appropriate actions. The  
DFL-200 provides this functionality using Application Layer Gateways (ALG).  
To use an Application Layer Gateway, the appropriate Application Layer Gateway  
definition is selected in the dropdown menu. The selected Application Layer Gateway will thus  
manage network traffic that matches the policy using this service.  
Currently, the DFL-200 supports two Application Layer Gateways, one is used to manage  
the FTP protocol and the other one is a HTTP Content Filtering ALG. For detailed information  
about how to configure the HTTP Application Layer Gateway, please see the Content Filtering  
chapter.  
 
VPN  
Introduction to IPSec  
This chapter introduces IPSec, the method, or rather set of methods used to provide VPN  
functionality. IPSec, Internet Protocol Security, is a set of protocols defined by the IETF,  
Internet Engineering Task Force, to provide IP security at the network layer.  
An IPSec based VPN, such as that of the DFL-200, is made up of two basic parts:  
Internet Key Exchange security protocol (IKE)  
IPSec protocol (ESP)  
The first part, IKE, is the initial negotiation phase, where the two VPN endpoints agree on  
which methods will be used to provide security for the underlying IP traffic. Furthermore, IKE  
is used to manage connections, by defining a set of Security Associations (SA), for each  
connection. Each SA is unidirectional, so there will be at least two SA per IPSec connection.  
The other part is the actual IP data being transferred, using the encryption and authentication  
methods agreed upon in the IKE negotiation. This can be accomplished in a number of ways;  
by using the IPSec protocol ESP.  
To set up an IPSec Virtual Private Network (VPN), you do not need to configure an  
Access Policy to enable encryption. Just fill in the following settings: VPN Name, Source  
Subnet (Local Net), Destination Gateway (If LAN-to-LAN), Destination Subnet (If LAN-to-LAN),  
and Authentication Method (Pre-shared key or Certificate). The firewalls on both ends must  
use the same Pre-shared key or set of Certificates and IPSec lifetime to make a VPN  
connection.  
Introduction to PPTP  
PPTP, Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol, jointly developed by Microsoft, US Robotics,  
and various other remote access companies known collectively as the PPTP Forum, is used  
to provide IP security at the network layer.  
A PPTP based VPN is made up by these parts:  
Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)  
Authentication Protocols (PAP, CHAP, MS-CHAP v1, MS-CHAP v2)  
Microsoft Point-To-Point Encryption (MPPE)  
Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE)  
PPTP uses TCP port 1723 for it's control connection and uses GRE (IP protocol 47) for  
the PPP data. PPTP supports data encryption by using MPPE.  
42  
 
Introduction to L2TP  
L2TP, Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol, a combination of Microsoft’s PPTP and Cisco’s L2F  
(Layer 2 Forwarding), is used to provide IP security at the network layer.  
An L2TP based VPN is made up by these parts:  
Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)  
Authentication Protocols (PAP, CHAP, MS-CHAP v1, MS-CHAP v2)  
Microsoft Point-To-Point Encryption (MPPE)  
L2TP uses UDP to transport the PPP data, this is often encapsulated in IPSec for  
encryption instead of using MPPE.  
Point-to-Point Protocol  
PPP (Point-to-Point Protocol) is a standard for transporting datagram’s over point-to-point  
links. PPP is used to encapsulate IP packets for transport between two peers.  
PPP consists of these three components:  
Link Control Protocols (LCP) to negotiate parameters, test and establish the link.  
Network Control Protocol (NCP) to establish and negotiate different network  
layer protocols (DFL-200 only supports IP)  
Data encapsulation to encapsulate datagram’s over the link.  
To establish a PPP tunnel, both sides send LCP frames to negotiate parameters and test  
the data link. If authentication is used, at least one of the peers has to authenticate itself  
before the network layer protocol parameters can be negotiated using NCP. During the LCP  
and NCP negotiation optional parameters such as encryption, can be negotiated. When LCP  
and NCP negotiation is done, IP datagram’s can be sent over the link.  
 
Authentication Protocols  
PPP supports different authentication protocols, PAP, CHAP, MS-CHAP v1 and MSCHAP  
v2. The authentication protocol to be used is decided during LCP negotiation.  
PAP  
PAP (Password Authentication Protocol) is a simple, plaintext authentication scheme,  
which means that both user name and password are sent over the tunnel plaintext. PAP is  
therefore not considered a secure authentication protocol.  
CHAP  
CHAP (Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol) is  
a
challenge-response  
authentication protocol specified in RFC 1994. CHAP uses an MD5 one-way encryption  
scheme to hash the response to a challenge issued by the DFL-200. CHAP is superior to PAP  
in that the password is never sent over the link. Instead the password is used to create the  
one-way MD5 hash. This does however mean that CHAP requires passwords to be stored in  
a reversibly encrypted form.  
MS-CHAP v1  
MS-CHAP v1 (Microsoft Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol version 1) is  
similar to CHAP, the main difference is that with MS-CHAP v1 the password only needs to be  
stored as an MD4 hash instead of a reversibly encrypted form. Another difference is that  
MSCHAP v1 uses MD4 Hashing as opposed to MD5 used in CHAP.  
MS-CHAP v2  
MS-CHAP v2 (Microsoft Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol version 1) is more  
secure then MS-CHAP v1 as it provides two–way authentication. MS-CHAPv2 is not  
backwards compatible with MS-CHAP v1. Both the Remote Access Server and the client  
must prove they have knowledge of the password via two-way Challenge response  
messages.  
MPPE, Microsoft Point-To-Point Encryption  
MPPE is used is used to encrypt Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) packets. MPPE uses the  
RSA RC4 algorithm to provide data confidentiality. The length of the session key to be used  
for the encryption can be negotiated. MPPE currently supports 40-bit, 56-bit and 128-bit RC4  
session keys.  
44  
 
L2TP/PPTP Clients  
Settings for L2TP/PPTP  
Client Configuration  
Name  
Specifies  
a
friendly  
name for the PPTP/L2TP Client  
tunnel.  
Username  
Specify  
the  
username for this PPTP/L2TP  
Client tunnel.  
Password/Confirm Password –  
The password to use for this  
PPTP/L2TP Client tunnel.  
Interface IP - Specifies if the  
L2TP/PPTP Client tunnel should  
use a Static IP or obtain a  
dynamic IP from the server.  
Remote Gateway  
address of the  
PPTP/L2TP Server.  
-
The IP  
remote  
Dial on demand – If enabled the tunnel will only be initiated when needed. If disabled the  
tunnel will be persistent (always on).  
Authentication  
protocol  
Specify which authentication  
protocol to use (if any). Refer to  
the Authentication Protocols  
section for more information  
about each type.  
MPPE encryption – If MPPE  
encryption is to be used, select  
the desired level of encryption  
key (MPPE is used with PPTP). A  
selection of None means that  
data will be sent over the PPP  
link unencrypted.  
Require IPSec encryption – If  
configuring for L2TP, you most  
likely will be using IPSec instead  
of MPPE for data encryption. To  
use IPSec enable the checkbox  
and select PSK or Certificate.  
 
L2TP/PPTP Servers  
Settings  
for  
L2TP/PPTP  
Server Configuration  
Name – Specifies a name for this  
PPTP/L2TP Server.  
Outer IP - Specifies the IP that  
the PPTP/L2TP server should  
listen on, leave it Blank for the  
WAN IP.  
Inner IP - Specifies the internal  
IP of the VPN tunnel. Leave this  
field Blank for the LAN IP.  
IP Pool and settings  
Information related to client IP  
assignment.  
Client IP Pool – An IP range, group or entire network that the PPTP/L2TP Server will use as  
an IP address pool to assign dynamic IP addresses to clients.  
Primary/Secondary DNS – IP addresses of the primary and secondary DNS servers. If  
utilizing the DNS Relay function, be sure to enable the check box to ensure proper DNS info.  
Primary/Secondary WINS - IP of the Windows Internet Name Service (WINS) servers that  
are used in Microsoft environments which uses the NetBIOS Name Servers (NBNS) to assign  
IP addresses to NetBIOS names.  
Authentication  
protocol  
Specify which authentication  
protocol to use, if any (not  
necessary).  
Refer  
to  
the  
Authentication  
Protocols  
section for more information  
about each type.  
MPPE encryption – If MPPE  
encryption is to be used, select  
the desired level of encryption  
key (MPPE is used with PPTP).  
A selection of None means that  
data will be sent over the PPP  
link unencrypted.  
Require IPSec encryption – If  
configuring for L2TP, you most  
likely will be using IPSec instead  
of MPPE for data encryption. To  
use IPSec enable the checkbox  
and select PSK or Certificate.  
46  
 
IPSec VPN between two networks  
In the following example users on the main  
office internal network can connect to the  
branch office internal network and vice versa.  
Communication between the two networks  
takes place in an encrypted IPSec VPN tunnel  
that connects the two DFL-200 NetDefend  
Firewalls across the Internet. Users on the  
internal networks are not aware that when they  
connect to a computer on the other network  
that the connection runs across the Internet.  
DFL-200 Firewall  
As shown in the example, you can use the  
DFL-200 to protect a branch office and a small  
main office. Both of these DFL-200s can be  
configured as IPSec VPN gateways to create a  
VPN tunnel that connects the branch office  
network to the main office network.  
DFL-200 Firewall  
The example shows an IPSec VPN  
between two internal networks. One may also  
create VPN tunnels between an internal  
network behind one VPN gateway and a DMZ  
network behind another or between two remote  
DMZ networks. The networks at the ends of the VPN tunnel are selected when you configure  
the VPN policy.  
Creating a LAN-to-LAN IPSec VPN Tunnel  
Follow these steps to add a LAN-to-LAN Tunnel.  
Step 1. Go to Firewall/VPN and choose Add new under IPSec.  
Step 2. Enter a Name for the new tunnel in the name field. The name can contain  
numbers (0-9) and upper and lower case letters (A-Z, a-z), and the special characters -  
and _. No other special characters and spaces are allowed.  
Step 3. Specify your local network, or your side of the tunnel, for example  
192.168.1.0/255.255.255.0, in the Local Net field.  
Step 4. Choose authentication type, either PSK (Pre-shared Key) or Certificate-based. If  
you choose PSK, make sure both firewalls use exactly the same PSK.  
Step 5. For Tunnel Type, choose LAN-to-LAN tunnel and specify the network behind the  
other DFL-200 as Remote Net. Also specify the external IP of the other DFL-200, either an  
IP or a DNS name.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the changes or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Repeat these steps with the firewall on the other site.  
 
VPN between client and an internal network  
In the following example users can connect to the  
main office internal network from anywhere on the  
Internet. Communication between the client and the  
internal network takes place in an encrypted VPN tunnel  
that connects the DFL-200 and the roaming users across  
the Internet.  
DFL-200 Firewall  
The example shows a VPN between a roaming VPN  
client and the internal network, but you can also create a  
VPN tunnel that uses the DMZ network. The networks at  
the ends of the VPN tunnel are selected when you  
configure the VPN policy.  
Creating a Roaming Users IPSec Tunnel  
Follow these steps to add a roaming user tunnel.  
Step 1. Go to Firewall and VPN and choose Add new under IPSec.  
Step 2. Enter a Name for the new tunnel in the name field. The name can contain  
numbers (0-9) and upper and lower case letters (A-Z, a-z), and the special characters -  
and _. No other special characters and spaces are allowed.  
Step 3. Specify your local network, or your side of the tunnel, for example  
192.168.1.0/255.255.255.0, in the Local Net field. This is the network your roaming VPN  
clients should be allowed to connect to.  
Step 4. Choose authentication type, either PSK (Pre-shared Key) or Certificate-based. If  
you choose PSK, make sure the clients use exactly the same PSK.  
Step 5. For Tunnel Type, choose Roaming User.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the changes or click Cancel to discard changes.  
48  
 
Adding an L2TP/PPTP VPN Client  
Follow these steps to add an L2TP or PPTP VPN Client configuration.  
Step 1. Go to Firewall and VPN and choose Add new PPTP client or Add new L2TP  
client in the L2TP/PPTP Clients section.  
Step 2. Enter a Name for the new tunnel in the name field. The name can contain  
numbers (0-9) and upper and lower case letters (A-Z, a-z), and the special characters ‘-  
‘ and ‘_’. No other special characters or spaces are allowed.  
Step 3. Enter the username and password for the PPTP or L2TP Client.  
Step 4. Specify if the IP should be received from the server or if a static one should be  
used. This field should be left blank in most scenarios.  
Step 5. Specify the Remote Gateway; this should be the IP of the L2TP or PPTP Server  
you are connecting to.  
Step 6. If you are using IPSec encryption for the L2TP or PPTP Client, choose the  
appropriate authentication type, either PSK (Pre-shared Key) or Certificate-based.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the change or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Adding an L2TP/PPTP VPN Server  
Follow these steps to add an L2TP or PPTP VPN Server configuration that listens on the  
WAN IP.  
Step 1. Go to Firewall and VPN and choose Add new PPTP server or Add new L2TP  
server in the L2TP/PPTP Server section.  
Step 2. Enter a Name for this tunnel in the name field. The name can contain numbers (0-  
9) and upper and lower case letters (A-Z, a-z), and the special characters ‘–‘ and ‘_’. No  
other special characters or spaces are allowed.  
Step 3. Specify the Client IP Pool; this should be a range of unused IP’s on the LAN  
interface that will be handed out to L2TP or PPTP Clients.  
Step 4. If you are using IPSec encryption for the L2TP or PPTP Client choose  
authentication type, either PSK (Pre-shared Key) or Certificate-based.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the change or click Cancel to discard changes.  
 
VPN – Advanced Settings  
Advanced settings for a VPN tunnel is used when the user needs to change some  
characteristics of the tunnel to, for example, try to connect to a third party VPN Gateway. The  
different settings per tunnel are:  
Limit MTU  
With this setting it is possible to limit the MTU (Max Transferable Unit) of the VPN tunnel.  
IKE Mode  
Specify if Main mode IKE or Aggressive Mode IKE should be used when establishing  
outbound VPN Tunnels. Inbound main mode connections will always be allowed. Inbound  
aggressive mode connections will only be allowed if this setting is set to aggressive mode.  
IKE DH Group  
Here it is possible to configure the Diffie-Hellman group to 1 (modp 768-bit), 2 (modp  
1024-bit), or 5 (modp 1536-bit).  
PFS – Perfect Forward Secrecy  
If PFS, Perfect Forwarding Secrecy, is enabled, a new Diffie-Hellman exchange is  
performed for each phase-2 negotiation. While this is slower, it makes sure that no keys are  
dependent on any other previously used keys; no keys are extracted from the same initial  
keying material. PFS is used to ensure that in the unlikely event an encryption key is  
compromised, no subsequent keys could be derived from that compromised key.  
NAT Traversal  
Here it is possible to configure how the NAT Traversal code should behave.  
Disabled - The firewall will not send the necessary Vendor ID's to indicate NAT-T support  
when setting up the tunnel.  
On if supported and need NAT - Will only use NAT-T if one of the VPN gateways is  
behind a NAT device.  
On if supported - Always tries to use NAT-T when setting up the tunnel.  
Keepalives  
No keepalives – Keep-alive is disabled.  
Automatic keepalives - The firewall will send ICMP pings to IP Addresses automatically  
discovered from the VPN Tunnel settings.  
Manually configured IP addresses - Configure the source and destination IP addresses  
used when sending the ICMP pings.  
50  
 
Proposal Lists  
To agree on the VPN connection parameters, a negotiation process is performed. As the  
result of the negotiations, the IKE and IPSec security associations (SA) are established. As  
the name implies, a proposal is the starting point for the negotiation. A proposal defines  
encryption parameters, for instance encryption algorithm, life times etc, that the VPN gateway  
supports.  
There are two types of proposals, IKE proposals and IPSec proposals. IKE proposals are  
used during IKE Phase-1 (IKE Security Negotiation), while IPSec proposals are using during  
IKE Phase-2 (IPSec Security Negotiation).  
A Proposal List is used to group several proposals. During the negotiation process, the  
proposals in the proposal list are offered to the remote VPN gateway one after another until a  
matching proposal is found.  
IKE Proposal List  
Cipher – Specifies the encryption algorithm used in this IKE proposal. Supported  
algorithms are AES, 3DES, DES, Blowfish, Twofish, and CAST128.  
Hash – Specifies the hash function used to calculate a check sum that reveals if the data  
packet is altered while being transmitted. MD5 and SHA1 are supported algorithms.  
Life Times – Specifies in KB or seconds when the security associations for the VPN  
tunnel need to be re-negotiated.  
IPSec Proposal List  
Cipher – Specifies the encryption algorithm used in this IPSec proposal. Supported  
algorithms are AES, 3DES, DES, Blowfish, Twofish, and CAST128.  
HMAC – Specifies the hash function used to calculate a check sum that reveals if the data  
packet is altered while being transmitted. MD5 and SHA1 are supported algorithms.  
Life Times – Specifies in KB or seconds when the security associations for the VPN  
tunnel need to be re-negotiated.  
 
Certificates  
A certificate is a digital proof of identity. It links an identity to a public key in a trustworthy  
manner. Certificates can be used to authenticate individual users or other entities. These  
types of certificates are commonly called end-entity certificates.  
Before a VPN tunnel with certificate based authentication can be set up, the firewall needs  
a certificate of its own and that of the remote firewall. These certificates can either be self-  
signed certificates, or issued by a CA.  
Trusting Certificates  
When setting up a VPN tunnel, the firewall has to be told whom it should trust. When using  
pre-shared keys, this is simple. The firewall trusts anyone who has the same pre-shared key.  
When using certificates, on the other hand, you tell the firewall that it can trust anyone  
whose certificate is signed by a given CA. Before a certificate is accepted, the following steps  
are taken to verify the validity of the certificate:  
Construct a certification path up to the trusted root CA.  
Verify the signatures of all certificates in the certification path.  
Fetch the CRL for each certificate to verify that none of the certificates have been  
revoked.  
Local identities  
This is a list of all the local identity certificates that can be used in VPN tunnels. A local  
identity certificate is used by the firewall to prove its identity to the remote VPN peer.  
To add a new local identity certificate, click Add new. The following pages will allow you to  
specify a name for the local identity, and upload the certificate and private key files. This  
certificate can be selected in the Local Identity field on the VPN page.  
This list also includes a special certificate called Admin. This is the certificate used by the  
Web interface to provide HTTPS access.  
Note: The certificate named Admin can only be replaced by another certificate. It cannot  
be deleted or renamed. This is used for HTTPS access to the DFL-200.  
Certificates of remote peers  
This is a list of all certificates of individual remote peers.  
To add a new remote peer certificate, click Add new. The following pages will allow you to  
specify a name for the remote peer certificate and upload the certificate file. This certificate  
can be selected in the Certificates field on the VPN page.  
52  
 
Certificate Authorities  
This is a list of all CA certificates. To add a new Certificate Authority certificate, click Add  
new. The following pages will allow you to specify a name for the CA certificate and upload  
the certificate file. This certificate can be selected in the Certificates field on the VPN page.  
Note: If the uploaded certificate is a CA certificate, it will automatically be placed in the  
Certificate Authorities list, even if Add New was clicked in the Remote Peers list. Similarly, a  
non-CA certificate will be placed in the Remote Peers list even if Add New was clicked from  
the Certificate Authorities list.  
Identities  
This is a list of all the configured Identity lists. An Identity list can be used on the VPN  
page to limit inbound VPN access from this list of known identities.  
Normally, a VPN tunnel is established if the certificate of the remote peer is present in the  
Certificates field in the VPN section, or if the remote peer's certificate is signed by a CA  
whose certificate is present in the Certificates field in the VPN section. However, in some  
cases it might be necessary to limit those who can establish a VPN tunnel, even among peers  
signed by the same CA.  
The Identity list can be selected in the Identity List field on the VPN page.  
If an Identity List is configured, the firewall will match the identity of the connecting remote  
peer against the Identity List, and only allow it to open the VPN tunnel if it matches the  
contents of the list.  
If no Identity List is used, no identity matching is performed.  
 
Content Filtering  
DFL-200 HTTP content filtering may be configured to scan all HTTP protocol streams for  
URLs or for potentially dangerous Web page content. If a match is found between the  
requested URL and the URL Blacklist the DFL-200 will block the Web page.  
You can configure the URL Blacklist to block all or just some of the pages on a website.  
Using this feature one may deny access to parts of a website without denying access to it  
completely.  
HTTP content filtering may also be configured to strip potentially dangerous content such  
as ActiveX objects, Flash objects, Java, and cookies.  
There is also a URL Whitelist to explicitly define URLs that should be excluded from all  
Content Filtering (URLs in this list will not be stripped of ActiveX, Java, Flash, or cookies).  
Note: For HTTP URL filtering to work, all HTTP traffic needs to go through a policy using a  
service with the HTTP ALG. Content Filtering rules will not apply to HTTPS streams. A pre-  
defined “HTTP-outbound TCP: All -> 80 ALG: "http-cf", max 100” service is provided to  
simplify the configuration of HTTP Content Filtering.  
Edit the URL Global Whitelist  
Follow these steps to  
add or remove a URL.  
Step 1. Navigate to  
Firewall  
/
Content  
Filtering and choose  
Edit global URL  
Whitelist.  
Step 2. Add or edit a  
URL that should  
always be allowed.  
Remove any URL  
that you do not want  
to always allow.  
Click the Apply  
button below to apply  
the changes or click  
Cancel  
to  
discard  
changes.  
54  
 
Edit the URL Global Blacklist  
Follow these steps to  
add or remove a URL.  
Step 1. Navigate to  
Firewall  
/
Content  
Filtering and choose  
Edit global URL  
Blacklist.  
Step 2. Add or edit a  
URL that should be  
filtered and blocked.  
File extensions may  
also be defined to  
block download of  
specified file types.  
Click the Apply  
button below to apply  
the changes or click  
Cancel  
to  
discard  
changes.  
Note: For HTTP URL filtering to work, all HTTP traffic needs to go through a policy using a  
service with the HTTP ALG. A pre-defined “HTTP-outbound TCP: All -> 80 ALG: "http-cf",  
max 100” service is provided to simplify the configuration of HTTP Content Filtering.  
Active content handling  
Active content handling can be enabled or disabled by checking the checkbox before each  
type you would like to strip. For example to strip ActiveX and Flash, enable the checkbox  
named Strip ActiveX objects. It is possible to strip ActiveX, Flash, Java, JavaScript, and  
VBScript. It is also possible to block cookies.  
Note: For HTTP URL filtering to work, all HTTP traffic needs to go through a policy using a  
service with the HTTP ALG. A pre-defined “HTTP-outbound TCP: All -> 80 ALG: "http-cf",  
max 100” service is provided to simplify the configuration of HTTP Content Filtering.  
 
Servers  
DHCP Server Settings  
The DFL-200 contains a DHCP server. DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) is a  
protocol that allows network administrators to automatically assign IP numbers to DHCP  
enabled computers on a  
network. The DFL-200  
DHCP Server helps to  
minimize  
the  
work  
necessary to administer  
a network, as there is no  
need for another DHCP  
server.  
The DFL-200 DHCP  
Server only implements  
a subset of the DHCP  
protocol necessary to  
serve a small network;  
these are:  
IP address  
Netmask  
Subnet  
Gateway  
address  
DNS  
Servers  
WINS  
Servers  
Domain  
name  
The DFL-200 DHCP Server assigns and manages IP addresses from specified address  
pools within the firewall to the DHCP clients.  
Note: Leases are remembered over a re-configure or reboot of the firewall.  
The DFL-200 also includes a DHCP Relay function. A DHCP Relay allows the DFL-200 to  
receive DHCP requests and forward those requests to a specified DHCP server. The relay  
function allows the use of existing DHCP servers in conjunction with the DFL-200 to ensure all  
users on all interfaces receive IP addresses when requested. The DFL-200 will also  
configure dynamic routes based on those DHCP leases. This enables the firewall to keep an  
accurate routing table based on active users and protects the DHCP server to some degree.  
Note: There can only be one DHCP Server or DHCP Relay configured per interface.  
56  
 
Enable DHCP Server  
To enable the DHCP Server on an interface, click on Servers in the menu bar, and then  
click DHCP Server below it.  
Follow these steps to enable the DHCP Server on the LAN interface.  
Step 1. Choose the LAN interface from the Available interfaces list.  
Step 2. Enable by checking the Use built-in DHCP Server box.  
Step 3. Fill in the IP Span, the start and end IP for the range of IP addresses that the DFL-  
200 can assign.  
Step 4. Fill in the DNS servers the DHCP server will assign to the clients; at least one  
should be provided. If the DNS Relay function is configured, the DHCP server will assign  
those addresses.  
Step 5. Optionally type in the WINS servers the DHCP server will assign to the clients.  
Step 6. Optionally type in the domain that the DHCP server will assign to the clients.  
Step 7. Choose the length of time the DHCP server will give out leases before the client  
has to renew them.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Enable DHCP Relay  
To enable the DHCP Relay on an interface, click on Servers in the menu bar, and then  
click DHCP Server below it.  
Follow these steps to enable the DHCP Relay on the LAN interface.  
Step 1. Choose the LAN interface from the Available interfaces list.  
Step 2. Enable by checking the Relay DHCP Requests to other DHCP server box.  
Step 3. Fill in the IP of the DHCP Server; note that it should be on another interface than  
where the DHCP request is coming from, i.e. a server on the DMZ.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Disable DHCP Server/Relay  
To disable the DHCP Server on an interface, click on Servers in the menu bar, and then  
click DHCP Server below it. Select the interface on which you wish to disable the DHCP  
server or relayer.  
Follow these steps to disable the DHCP Server or Relayer on the LAN interface.  
Step 1. Choose the LAN interface from the Available interfaces list.  
Step 2. Disable by checking the No DHCP processing box.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
 
DNS Relay Settings  
Click on Servers in the menu bar, and then click DNS Relay below it. The DFL-200  
contains a DNS Relay function that can be configured to relay DNS queries from the internal  
LAN to the DNS servers used by the firewall itself.  
Enable DNS Relayer  
Follow these steps to enable the DNS Relayer.  
Step 1. Enable by checking the Enable DNS Relayer box.  
Step 2. Enter the IP numbers that the DFL-200 should listen for DNS queries on.  
Note: If “Use address of LAN interface” is checked, you do not have to enter an IP in IP  
Address 1, as the firewall will know what address to use.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
Disable DNS Relayer  
Follow these steps to disable the DNS Relayer.  
Step 1. Disable by un-checking the Enable DNS Relayer box.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
58  
 
Tools  
Ping  
Click on Tools in the menu bar, and then click Ping below it. This tool is used to send a  
specified number of ICMP Echo Request packets to a given destination. All packets are sent  
in immediate succession rather than one per second. This method is the best suited for  
diagnosing connectivity problems.  
IP Address – Target IP to send the ICMP Echo Requests to.  
Number of packets – Number of ICMP Echo Request packets to send, up to 10.  
Packet size – Size of the packet to send, between 32 and 1500 bytes.  
Ping Example  
In this example, the IP Address is 192.168.10.1 the Number of packets is five. After  
clicking on Apply the firewall will start to send the ICMP Echo Requests to the specified IP.  
After a few seconds the result will be displayed. In this example, only four out of five packets  
were received back, a 20% packet loss, and the average time for the packets to travel to and  
from the specified IP was 57 ms.  
 
Dynamic DNS  
The Dynamic DNS (requires Dynamic DNS Service) allows you to alias a dynamic IP  
address to a static hostname, allowing your device to be more easily accessed by a specific  
name. When this function is enabled, the IP address in Dynamic DNS Server will be  
automatically updated with the new IP address provided by ISP.  
Click DynDNS in the Tools menu to enter Dynamic DNS configuration.  
The firewall provides a list of a few predefined DynDNS service providers. Users must  
register with one of these providers before trying to use this function.  
Add Dynamic DNS Settings  
Follow these steps to enable Dynamic DNS.  
Step 1. Go to Tools and DynDNS.  
Step 2. Choose what Dynamic DNS service you would like to use, and fill in the required  
information, username and password in all cases and domains in all but cjb.net.  
Click the Apply button below to apply the settings or click Cancel to discard changes.  
60  
 
Backup  
Click on Tools in the  
menu bar, and then click  
Backup below it. Here an  
administrator can backup  
and  
restore  
the  
configuration.  
The  
configuration file stores  
system settings, IP  
addresses of the firewall’s  
network interfaces,  
address table, service  
table, IPSec settings, port  
mapping, and policies.  
When the configuration  
process is completed, a  
system administrator can  
download  
the  
configuration file onto a  
local disc as a backup.  
System  
Administrators  
can restore the firewall’s configuration file with the one stored on disc.  
Exporting the DFL-200’s Configuration  
Follow these steps to export the configuration.  
Step 1. Under the Tools menu and the Backup section, click on the Download  
configuration button.  
Step 2. When the File Download pop-up window appears, choose the destination place in  
which to save the exported file. The Administrator may choose to rename the file if  
preferred.  
Restoring the DFL-200’s Configuration  
Follow these steps to restore the configuration.  
Step 1. Under the Tools menu and the Backup section, click on the Browse button next  
to the empty field. When the Choose File pop-up window appears, select the file that  
contains the saved firewall settings, then click OK.  
Step 2. Click Upload Configuration to import the file into the firewall.  
 
Restart/Reset  
Restarting the DFL-200  
Follow these steps restart the DFL-200.  
Step 1. Choose if you want to do a quick or full restart.  
Step 2. Click Restart Unit and the unit will restart.  
62  
 
Restoring system settings to factory defaults  
Use the following procedure to restore system settings to the factory defaults. This  
procedure will possibly change the DFL-200 firmware version to a lower version if it has been  
upgraded. Make sure you have the current firmware file available for upload to the device in  
the case where the firmware version is defaulted to an older version.  
The factory reset procedure erases all configuration changes that have been made to the  
DFL-200 and will revert the system to its original configuration, including resetting interface  
addresses.  
Follow these steps to reset the DFL-200 to factory default settings through the Web-based  
Configuration:  
Step 1. Under the Tools menu and the Reset section, click on the Reset to Factory  
Defaults button.  
Step 2. Click OK in the dialog to reset the unit to factory defaults, or press Cancel to  
cancel.  
Follow these steps to reset the DFL-200 to factory default settings using the Reset button  
located at the rear of the device:  
Step 1. Using a paperclip or some other rigid small diameter object push in and hold the  
Reset button for 15 seconds while the DFL-200 is powered on.  
Step 2. The Power light will go out to indicate the device is restarting with the factory  
default configuration.  
Step 3. Allow 2 minutes for the Firewall to completely restart. At this point the firewall can  
be accessed via its default LAN IP (192.168.1.1) through a web browser. The first login  
will require the use of the Wizard to complete basic connectivity configurations.  
You can restore your system settings by uploading a previously generated system  
configuration file to the DFL-200 if a backup of the device has been downloaded to your Local  
Machine Prior to reset.  
 
Upgrade  
The DFL-200’s software, IDS signatures, and system parameters are all stored on a flash  
memory card. The flash  
memory card is re-  
writable and re-readable.  
Upgrade  
Firmware  
To  
upgrade  
the  
firmware of the DFL-200,  
obtain the latest version  
from  
(US). Make sure the  
firmware file is stored on  
the PC connected to the  
firewall. Connect to the  
web-based GUI, navigate  
to the Upgrade / Tools  
menu, click Browse, and  
choose the file name of  
the newest version of  
firmware you wish to load.  
Click Upload firmware  
image to load the new  
firmware and restart the  
device.  
The updating process will not overwrite the system configuration. Though it is not necessary,  
it is a good idea to backup the system configuration before upgrading the software.  
Upgrade IDS Signature-database  
To upgrade the signature-database first download the newest IDS signatures from D-Link.  
After downloading the newest version of the software, connect to the firewall’s Web-based  
configuration GUI, enter Upgrade on the Tools menu, click Browse in the Upgrade Unit’s  
signature-database section, and choose the file name of the newest version of the IDS  
signatures. Then click Upload signature database.  
64  
 
Status  
In this section, the DFL-200 displays the status information about the Firewall.  
Administrator may use the Status section to check the System Status, Interface statistics,  
VPN status, IP connections, and DHCP Servers Status.  
System  
Click on Status in the menu bar, and then click System below it. A window will appear  
providing some information about the DFL-200.  
Uptime – The time the  
firewall has been running,  
since the last reboot or start.  
Time – The current time  
and date.  
Configuration – Shows  
when the last administrative  
configuration change was  
activated as well as the  
originating IP.  
Firmware version – The  
firmware version running on  
the firewall.  
Last restart – The reason  
for the last restart.  
IDS Signatures – The  
IDS  
signature  
database  
versions.  
Resources  
Displays  
CPU load, RAM usage,  
Connections, VPN Tunnels  
and Rules configured.  
There are also two graphs  
on this page; one shows the  
CPU usage during the last 24  
hours. The other shows the  
state table usage during the last 24 hours. Useful for plotting usage trends for your  
application.  
 
Interfaces  
Click on Status in the menu bar, and then click Interfaces below it. A window will appear  
providing information about the interfaces on the DFL-200. By default, information about the  
LAN interface will be displayed. To see another one, click on that interface (WAN or DMZ).  
Interface – Name of  
the interface shown, LAN,  
WAN, or DMZ.  
Link status – Displays  
what link the current  
interface has. The speed  
can be 10 or 100 Mbps  
and the duplex can be  
Half or Full.  
MAC Address – MAC  
address of the interface.  
Send rate – Current  
amount of traffic sent  
through the interface.  
Receive  
rate  
Current amount of traffic  
received  
interface.  
through  
the  
There are also two  
graphs displaying the  
send and receive rate  
through the interfaces  
during the last 24 hours.  
66  
 
VPN  
Click on Status in the menu bar, and then click Interfaces below it. A window will appear  
providing information about the VPN connections on the DFL-200. By default information  
about the first VPN tunnel will be displayed. To see another one, click on that VPN tunnels  
name.  
The two graphs  
display the send and  
receive rate through  
the  
selected  
VPN  
tunnel during the last  
24 hours.  
In this example, a  
tunnel  
named  
vpntunnel1 is selected.  
This is a tunnel that  
allows roaming users.  
So under the IPSec SA  
listing each roaming  
user connected to this  
tunnel is shown.  
 
Connections  
Click on Status in the menu bar, and then click Connections below it. A window will  
appear providing information about the content of the state table.  
The state table shows  
the last 100 connections  
opened  
through  
the  
firewall. Connections are  
created when traffic is  
permitted to pass via the  
policies.  
Each connection has  
two timeout values, one  
in each direction. These  
are updated when the  
firewall receives packets  
from each end of the  
connection. The value  
shown in the Timeout  
column is the lower of the  
two values.  
Possible values in the  
State column include:  
TCP_CLOSE,  
TCP_OPEN, SYN_RECV, FIN_RECV, and so on.  
The Proto column can have:  
TCP - The connection is a TCP connection.  
PING - The connection is an ICMP ECHO connection.  
UDP - The connection is a UDP connection.  
RAWIP - The connection uses an IP protocol other than TCP, UDP, or ICMP.  
The Source and Destination columns show which IP and port on the source interface the  
connection is coming from, and which interface and port number the connection is going to.  
68  
 
DHCP Server  
Click on Status in the menu bar, and then click DHCP Server below it. A window will  
appear providing information about the configured DHCP Servers. By default, information  
about the LAN interface  
will be displayed. To see  
another one, click on  
that interface.  
Interface – Name of  
the interface the DHCP  
Server is running on.  
IP Span – Displays  
the configured range of  
IP addresses that are  
given out as DHCP  
leases.  
Usage  
Displays  
how much of the IP  
range is give out to  
DHCP clients.  
Active leases are  
the current computers  
using this DHCP server.  
It is also possible to end  
a computers lease on  
this screen by clicking  
on End lease corresponding to that IP.  
Inactive leases are leases that are not currently in use but have been used by a computer  
before. That computer will get the lease the next time it is on the network. If there is no free IP  
in the pool these IP’s will be used for new computers.  
 
How to read the logs  
Although the exact format of each log entry depends on how your SYSLog recipient works,  
most are very similar. The way in which logs are read is also dependent on how your SYSLog  
recipient works. SYSLog daemons on UNIX servers usually log to text files, line by line.  
Most SYSLog recipients preface each log entry with a timestamp and the IP address of  
the machine that sent the log data:  
Oct 20 2003 09:45:23 gateway  
This is followed by the text the sender has chosen to send. All log entries from the DFL-  
200 are prefaced with "EFW:" and a category, e.g. "DROP:"  
Oct 20 2003 09:45:23 gateway EFW: DROP:  
Subsequent text is dependent on the event that has occurred.  
USAGE events  
These events are sent periodically and provide statistical information regarding  
connections and amount of traffic.  
Example:  
Oct 20 2003 09:45:23 gateway EFW: USAGE: conns=1174 if0=core ip0=127.0.0.1  
tp0=0.00 if1=wan ip1=192.168.10.2 tp1=11.93 if2=lan ip2=192.168.0.1 tp2=13.27 if3=dmz  
ip3=192.168.1.1 tp3=0.99  
The value after “conns" is the number of open connections through the firewall when the  
usage log was sent. The value after “tp” is the throughput through the firewall at the time the  
usage log was logged.  
DROP events  
These events may be generated by a number of different functions in the firewall. The  
most common source is the policies.  
Example:  
Oct 20 2003 09:42:25 gateway EFW: DROP: prio=1 rule=Rule_1 action=drop recvif=wan  
srcip=192.168.10.2 destip=192.168.0.1 ipproto=TCP ipdatalen=28 srcport=3572 destport=135  
tcphdrlen=28 syn=1  
In this line, traffic from 192.168.10.2 coming from the WAN side of the firewall, connecting  
to 192.168.10.1 on port 135 is dropped. The protocol used is TCP.  
70  
 
CONN events  
These events are generated if auditing has been enabled.  
One event will be generated when a connection is established. This event will include  
information about the protocol, receiving interface, source IP address, source port, destination  
interface, destination IP address, and destination port.  
Open Example:  
Oct 20 2003 09:47:56 gateway EFW: CONN: prio=1 rule=Rule_8 conn=open  
connipproto=TCP connrecvif=lan connsrcip=192.168.0.10 connsrcport=3179 conndestif=wan  
conndestip=64.7.210.132 conndestport=80  
In this line, traffic from 192.168.0.10 on the LAN interface is connecting to 64.7.210.132 on  
port 80 on the WAN side of the firewall (internet).  
Another event is generated when the connection is closed. The information included in the  
event is the same as in the event sent when the connection was opened, with the exception  
that statistics regarding sent and received traffic is also included.  
Close Example:  
Oct 20 2003 09:48:05 gateway EFW: CONN: prio=1 rule=Rule_8 conn=close  
connipproto=TCP connrecvif=lan connsrcip=192.168.0.10 connsrcport=3179 conndestif=wan  
conndestip=64.7.210.132 conndestport=80 origsent=62 termsent=60  
In this line, the connection in the other example is closed.  
 
Step by Step Guides  
The following guides make use of example IP Addresses, users, sites and passwords.  
You will have to exchange the example information with your own values. Passwords used in  
these examples are not recommended for real life use. Strong passwords and keys should be  
chosen making use of symbols, letters, and numbers to decrease the likelihood of a brute  
force dictionary attack success.  
In these guides for example Firewall->Users will mean that the Firewall tab should first  
be selected from the menu at the top of the screen,  
followed by the Users button to the left of the screen should be selected.  
72  
 
LAN-to-LAN VPN using IPSec  
Settings for Branch office  
1. Setup interfaces, System->Interfaces:  
WAN IP: 194.0.2.10  
LAN IP: 192.168.4.1, Subnet mask: 255.255.255.0  
2. Setup IPSec tunnel, Firewall->VPN:  
Under IPSec tunnels click Add new  
Name the tunnel ToMainOffice  
Local net: 192.168.4.0/24  
PSK: 1234567890 (Do not use this as your PSK)  
Retype PSK: 1234567890  
 
Select Tunnel type: LAN-to-LAN tunnel  
Remote Net: 192.168.1.0/24  
Remote Gateway: 194.0.2.20  
Enable Automatically add a route for the remote network  
Click Apply  
3. Setup policies for the new tunnel, Firewall->Policy:  
Click Global policy parameters  
Enable Allow all VPN traffic: internal->VPN, VPN->internal and VPN->VPN  
Click Apply  
4. Click Activate and wait for the firewall to restart  
74  
Settings for Main office  
1. Setup interfaces, System->Interfaces:  
WAN IP: 194.0.2.20  
LAN IP: 192.168.1.1, Subnet mask: 255.255.255.0  
2. Setup IPSec tunnel, Firewall->VPN:  
Under IPSec tunnels click add new  
Name the tunnel ToBranchOffice  
Local net: 192.168.1.0/24  
PSK: 1234567890 (Note! You should use a key that is hard to guess)  
Retype PSK: 1234567890  
Select Tunnel type: LAN-to-LAN tunnel  
Remote Net: 192.168.4.0/24  
Remote Gateway: 194.0.2.10  
Enable “Automatically add a route for the remote network”  
Click Apply  
 
3. Setup policies for the new tunnel, Firewall->Policy:  
Click Global policy parameters  
Enable Allow all VPN traffic: internal->VPN, VPN->internal and VPN->VPN  
Click Apply  
4. Click Activate and wait for the firewall to restart  
This example will allow all traffic between the two offices. To get a more secure solution read  
the A more secure LAN-to-LAN VPN solution section of this user guide.  
76  
LAN-to-LAN VPN using PPTP  
Settings for Branch office  
1. Setup interfaces, System->Interfaces:  
WAN IP: 194.0.2.10  
LAN IP: 192.168.4.1, Subnet mask: 255.255.255.0  
2. Setup PPTP client, Firewall->VPN:  
Under PPTP/L2TP clients click Add new PPTP client  
Name the tunnel toMainOffice  
 
Username: BranchOffice  
Password: 1234567890 (Note! You should use a password that is hard to guess)  
Retype password: 1234567890  
Interface IP: leave blank  
Remote gateway: 194.0.2.20  
Remote net: 192.168.1.0/24  
Dial on demand: leave unchecked  
Under authentication MSCHAPv2 should be the only checked option.  
78  
Under MPPE encryption 128 bit should be the only checked option.  
Leave Use IPSec encryption unchecked  
Click Apply  
3. Setup policies for the new tunnel, Firewall->Policy:  
Click Global policy parameters  
Enable Allow all VPN traffic: internal->VPN, VPN->internal and VPN->VPN  
Click Apply  
4. Click Activate and wait for the firewall to restart.  
Settings for Main office  
1. Setup interfaces, System->Interfaces:  
WAN IP: 194.0.2.20  
LAN IP: 192.168.1.1, Subnet mask: 255.255.255.0  
 
2. Setup PPTP server, Firewall->VPN:  
Under L2TP / PPTP Server click Add new PPTP server  
Name the server pptpServer  
Leave Outer IP and Inner IP blank  
Set client IP pool to 192.168.1.100 – 192.168.1.199  
Check Proxy ARP dynamically added routes  
Check Use unit’s own DNS relayer addresses  
Leave WINS settings blank  
80  
Under authentication MSCHAPv2 should be the only checked option.  
Under MPPE encryption 128 bit should be the only checked option.  
Leave Use IPsec encryption unchecked  
Click Apply  
3. Setup policies for the new tunnel, Firewall->Policy:  
Click Global policy parameters  
Enable Allow all VPN traffic: internal->VPN, VPN->internal and VPN->VPN  
Click Apply  
4. Set up the authentication source, Firewall->Users:  
Select Local database  
Click Apply  
5. Add a new user, Firewall->Users:  
Under Users in local database click Add new  
Name the new user BranchOffice  
Enter password: 1234567890  
Retype password: 1234567890  
Leave static client IP empty (could also be set to 192.168.1.200. If no IP is set here  
the IP pool from the PPTP server settings are used).  
Set Networks behind user to 192.168.4.0/24  
Click Apply  
6. Click Activate and wait for the firewall to restart.  
This example will allow all traffic between the two offices. To get a more secure solution read  
82  
LAN-to-LAN VPN using L2TP  
Settings for Branch office  
1. Setup interfaces, System->Interfaces:  
WAN IP: 194.0.2.10  
LAN IP: 192.168.4.1, Subnet mask: 255.255.255.0  
2. Setup L2TP client, Firewall->VPN:  
Under L2TP / PPTP client click Add new L2TP client  
Name the server toMainOffice  
 
Username: BranchOffice  
Password: 1234567890 (Note! You should use a password that is hard to guess)  
Retype password: 1234567890  
Interface IP: leave blank  
Remote gateway: 194.0.2.20  
Remote net: 192.168.1.0/24  
Dial on demand: leave unchecked  
Under authentication only MSCHAPv2 should be checked  
84  
Under MPPE encryption only None should be checked  
Check Use IPsec encryption  
Enter key 1234567890 (Note! You should use a key that is hard to guess)  
Retype key 1234567890  
Click Apply  
3. Setup policies for the new tunnel, Firewall->Policy:  
Click Global policy parameters  
Enable Allow all VPN traffic: internal->VPN, VPN->internal and VPN->VPN  
Click Apply  
4. Click Activate and wait for the firewall to restart  
Settings for Main office  
1. Setup interfaces, System->Interfaces:  
WAN IP: 194.0.2.20  
LAN IP: 192.168.1.1, Subnet mask: 255.255.255.0  
2. Setup L2TP server, Firewall->VPN:  
Under L2TP / PPTP Server click Add new L2TP server  
Name the server l2tpServer  
Leave Outer IP and Inner IP blank  
Set client IP pool to 192.168.1.100 – 192.168.1.199  
Check Proxy ARP dynamically added routes  
Check Use unit’s own DNS relayer addresses  
Leave WINS settings blank  
86  
 
Under authentication MSCHAPv2 should be the only checked option.  
Under MPPE encryption None should be the only checked option.  
Check Use IPSec encryption  
Enter key 1234567890 (Note! You should not use this key)  
Retype key 1234567890  
Click Apply  
3. Setup policies for the new tunnel, Firewall->Policy:  
Click Global policy parameters  
Enable Allow all VPN traffic: internal->VPN, VPN->internal and VPN->VPN  
Click Apply  
4. Set up authentication source, Firewall->Users:  
Select Local database  
Click Apply  
88  
5. Add a new user, Firewall->Users:  
Under Users in local database click Add new  
Name the new user BranchOffice  
Enter password: 1234567890  
Retype password: 1234567890  
Leave static client IP empty (could also be set to eg 192.168.1.200. If no IP is set  
here the IP pool from the L2TP server settings are used).  
Set Networks behind user to 192.168.4.0/24  
Click Apply  
6. Click Activate and wait for the firewall to restart.  
This example will allow all traffic between the two offices. To get a more secure solution read  
the A more secure LAN-to-LAN VPN solution section in this chapter.  
A more secure LAN-to-LAN VPN solution  
In order to establish a more secure LAN-to-LAN VPN connection, traffic policies should be  
created instead of allowing all traffic between the two private Networks. The following steps  
show how to enable some common services allowed through the VPN tunnel. In this example  
we have a mail server, ftp server and a web server (intranet) in the main office that we want to  
access from the branch office.  
Settings for Branch office  
1. Setup policies for the new tunnel, Firewall->Policy:  
Click Global policy parameters  
Disable Allow all VPN traffic: internal->VPN, VPN->internal and VPN->VPN  
Click Apply  
2. Now is it possible to create policies for the VPN interfaces. Select from LAN to  
toMainOffice and click Show.  
3. Click Add new to create the first rule  
90  
 
4. Setup the new rule:  
Name the new rule: allow_pop3  
Select action: Allow  
Select service: pop3  
Select schedule: Always  
We don’t want any Intrusion detection for now, so leave this option unchecked.  
Click Apply  
5. The first policy rule is now created. Repeat step 4 to create services named  
allow_imap, allow_ftp and allow_http. The services for these policies should be imap,  
ftp_passthrough and http respectively.  
The policy list for LAN->toMainOffice should now look like this.  
6. Click Activate and wait for the firewall to restart.  
92  
Settings for Main office  
1. Setup policies for the new tunnel, Firewall->Policy:  
Click Global policy parameters  
Disable Allow all VPN traffic: internal->VPN, VPN->internal and VPN->VPN  
Click Apply  
2. Now it is possible to create policies for the VPN interfaces. Select from toBranchOffice  
to LAN and click Show.  
3. Create the same 4 policy rules that were created on the branch office firewall  
(allow_pop3, allow_imap, allow_ftp and allow_http).  
4. Click Activate and wait for the firewall to restart.  
 
Windows XP client and PPTP server  
Settings for the Windows XP client  
1. Open the control panel (Start button -> Control panel).  
2. If you are using the Category view, click on the  
Network and Internet Connections  
icon. Then click Create a connection to  
the network on your workplace and  
continue to step 6.  
If you are using the Classic view, click on the Network Connections icon.  
3. Under Network task, click Create  
a
new  
connection  
4. The New connection wizard window opens up. Click next.  
94  
 
5. Select Connect to the network at my workplace and click Next  
6. Select Virtual Private Network connection and click Next  
96  
7. Name the connection MainOffice and click Next  
8. Select Do not dial the initial connection and click Next  
98  
9. Type the IP address to the server, 194.0.2.20, and click Next  
10. Click Finish  
11. Type user name HomeUser and password 1234567890 (Note! You should use a  
password that is hard to guess)  
12. Click Properties  
100  
13. Select the Networking tab and change Type of VPN to PPTP VPN. Click OK.  
All settings needed for the XP client are now complete. Once we have configured the  
server on the firewall you should be able to click Connect to establish the connection to  
the Main office.  
Settings for Main office  
1. Setup interfaces, System->Interfaces:  
WAN IP: 194.0.2.20  
LAN IP: 192.168.1.1, Subnet mask: 255.255.255.0  
 
2. Setup PPTP server, Firewall->VPN:  
Under L2TP / PPTP Server click Add new PPTP server  
Name the server pptpServer  
Leave Outer IP and Inner IP blank  
Set client IP pool to 192.168.1.100 – 192.168.1.199  
Check Proxy ARP dynamically added routes  
Check Use unit’s own DNS relayer addresses  
Leave WINS settings blank  
Under authentication MSCHAPv2 should be the only checked option.  
Under MPPE encryption 128 bit should be the only checked option.  
Leave Use IPSec encryption unchecked  
Click Apply  
3. Setup policies for the new tunnel, Firewall->Policy:  
Click Global policy parameters  
Enable Allow all VPN traffic: internal->VPN, VPN->internal and VPN->VPN  
Click Apply  
4. Set up authentication source, Firewall->Users:  
Select Local database  
Click Apply  
5. Add a new user, Firewall->Users:  
Under Users in local database click Add new  
Name the new user HomeUser  
Enter password: 1234567890  
Retype password: 1234567890  
Leave static client IP empty (could also be set to eg 192.168.1.200. If no IP is set  
here the IP pool from the PPTP server settings are used).  
Click Apply  
6. Click Activate and wait for the firewall to restart.  
102  
This example will allow all traffic from the client to the main office network. To get a more  
secure solution read the Settings for the Main office part of the A more secure LAN-to-  
Windows XP client and L2TP server  
The Windows XP client to L2TP server setup is quite similar to the PPTP setup above.  
Settings for the Windows XP client  
To setup a L2TP connection from Windows XP to the Main office firewall, please follow the  
steps in the PPTP guide above for the client side. The only changes to the PPTP guide are:  
1. In step 13, change the Type of VPN to L2TP IPSec VPN.  
104  
 
2. Select the Security tab and click IPSec Settings  
3. Check Use pre-shared key for authentication, type the key and click OK  
Settings for Main office  
1. Setup interfaces, System->Interfaces:  
WAN IP: 194.0.2.20  
LAN IP: 192.168.1.1, Subnet mask: 255.255.255.0  
2. Setup L2TP server, Firewall->VPN:  
Under L2TP / PPTP Server click Add new L2TP server  
Name the server l2tpServer  
Leave Outer IP and Inner IP blank  
Set client IP pool to 192.168.1.100 – 192.168.1.199  
Check Proxy ARP dynamically added routes  
Check Use unit’s own DNS relayer addresses  
Leave WINS settings blank  
Under authentication MSCHAPv2 should be the only checked option  
Under MPPE encryption None should be the only checked option  
Check the Use IPSec encryption box  
Enter the pre-shared key, 1234567890, and retype same pre-shared key  
Click Apply  
3. Setup policies for the new tunnel, Firewall->Policy:  
Click Global policy parameters  
Enable Allow all VPN traffic: internal->VPN, VPN->internal and VPN->VPN  
Click Apply  
4. Set up authentication source, Firewall->Users:  
Select Local database  
Click Apply  
106  
 
5. Add a new user, Firewall->Users:  
Under Users in local database click Add new  
Name the new user HomeUser  
Enter password: 1234567890  
Retype password: 1234567890  
Leave static client IP empty (could also be set to eg 192.168.1.200. If no IP is set  
here the IP pool from the PPTP server settings are used).  
Click Apply  
6. Click Activate and wait for the firewall to restart.  
This example will allow all traffic from the client to the main office network. To get a more  
secure solution read the Settings for the Main office part of the A more secure LAN-to-  
Intrusion Detection and Prevention  
Intrusion detection and prevention can be enabled for both policies and port mappings. In  
this example we are using a port mapping. The policy setup is quite similar.  
In this example a mail server with IP 192.168.2.4 and a web server with IP 192.168.2.5 is  
connected to the DMZ interface on the firewall.  
To set up intrusion detection and prevention to a web server on the DMZ net, follow these  
steps:  
1. Create a Port mapping for the web server, Firewall->Port Mapping:  
Under Configured mappings, click Add new  
108  
 
2. Set up the newly created port mapping:  
Name the rule map_www  
Select service http-in-all  
Enter pass to IP: 192.168.2.5 (the IP of the web server)  
Check the Intrusion detection / prevention option  
Select mode Prevention  
Enable email alerting by checking the Alerting box  
Click Apply  
The new mapping is now in the list.  
3. Setup email server and enable alerting, System->Logging:  
Check Enable E-mail alerting for IDS/IDP events  
Select sensitivity Normal  
Enter SMTP server IP (email server): 192.168.2.4  
Enter sender: [email protected]  
Enter E-mail address 1: [email protected]  
Enter E-mail address 2: [email protected]  
Click Apply  
4. Click Activate and wait for the firewall to restart.  
When attacks are stopped by the firewall it will listed in the logs. Since we enabled email  
alerting in this example, emails will also be sent to the users webmaster and steve.  
In this example we used the prevention mode. This means that the firewall will block all  
attacks. In Inspection only mode nothing will be blocked, the firewall will only log the attacks  
and send email alerts (if that is enabled).  
110  
Appendixes  
Appendix A: ICMP Types and Codes  
The Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) has many messages that are identified by  
a “type” field; many of these ICMP types have a "code" field. Here we list the types with their  
assigned code fields.  
Type Name  
Code  
Description  
Reference  
RFC792  
RFC792  
RFC792  
RFC792  
RFC792  
0
3
Echo Reply  
0
0
1
2
3
4
No Code  
Destination Unreachable  
Net Unreachable  
Host Unreachable  
Protocol Unreachable  
Port Unreachable  
Fragmentation Needed and RFC792  
Don't Fragment was Set  
5
6
7
8
9
Source Route Failed  
RFC792  
Destination Network Unknown RFC792  
Destination Host Unknown  
Source Host Isolated  
Communication  
RFC792  
RFC792  
with RFC792  
Network is  
Destination  
Administratively Prohibited  
10  
11  
12  
Communication  
Destination  
Administratively Prohibited  
with RFC792  
is  
Host  
Destination Network RFC792  
Unreachable for Type of  
Service  
Destination Host Unreachable RFC792  
for Type of Service  
13  
Communication  
RFC1812  
Administratively Prohibited  
14  
15  
0
Host Precedence Violation  
Precedence cutoff in effect  
No Code  
RFC1812  
RFC1812  
RFC792  
4
5
Source Quench  
Redirect  
0
Redirect Datagram for the RFC792  
Network (or subnet)  
 
1
2
3
Redirect Datagram for the RFC792  
Host  
Redirect Datagram for the RFC792  
Type of Service and Network  
Redirect Datagram for the RFC792  
Type of Service and Host  
8
9
Echo  
0
0
No Code  
RFC792  
Router Advertisement  
Normal router advertisement  
RFC1256  
16  
0
Does not route common traffic RFC2002  
No Code RFC1256  
10  
11  
Router Selection  
Time Exceeded  
0
Time to Live exceeded in RFC792  
Transit  
1
Fragment Reassembly Time RFC792  
Exceeded  
12  
Parameter Problem  
0
1
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
Pointer indicates the error  
Missing a Required Option  
Bad Length  
RFC792  
RFC1108  
RFC792  
RFC792  
RFC792  
RFC792  
RFC792  
RFC950  
RFC950  
RFC1393  
RFC1475  
13  
14  
15  
16  
17  
18  
30  
31  
Timestamp  
No Code  
Timestamp Reply  
Information Request  
Information Reply  
Address Mask Request  
Address Mask Reply  
Traceroute  
No Code  
No Code  
No Code  
No Code  
No Code  
Datagram  
Error  
Conversion  
40  
Photuris  
RFC2521  
RFC2521  
RFC2521  
RFC2521  
RFC2521  
RFC2521  
RFC2521  
0
1
2
3
4
5
Bad SPI  
Authentication Failed  
Decompression Failed  
Decryption Failed  
Need Authentication  
Need Authorization  
Source: http://www.iana.org/assignments/icmp-parameters  
112  
Appendix B: Common IP Protocol Numbers  
These are some of the more common IP Protocols. For a list of all protocols, follow the link  
after the table.  
Decimal Keyword  
Description  
Reference  
RFC792  
1
2
ICMP  
IGMP  
GGP  
IP  
Internet Control Message  
Internet Group Management  
Gateway-to-Gateway  
IP in IP (encapsulation)  
Stream  
RFC1112  
RFC823  
3
4
RFC2003  
RFC1190, RFC1819  
RFC793  
5
ST  
6
TCP  
EGP  
UDP  
GRE  
Transmission Control  
Exterior Gateway Protocol  
User Datagram  
8
RFC888  
17  
47  
RFC768  
General  
Encapsulation  
Routing  
Security RFC2406  
RFC2402  
50  
ESP  
Encapsulation  
Payload  
51  
AH  
Authentication Header  
108  
IPComp  
I
IP Payload Compression RFC2393  
Protocol  
112  
VRRP  
Virtual Router Redundancy  
Protocol  
115  
L2TP  
Layer Two Tunneling Protocol  
Source: http://www.iana.org/assignments/protocol-numbers  
 
Appendix C: Multiple Public IP addresses  
Mapping of a Public IP address other than that of the Firewall to a Server located on either  
internal interface can be accomplished in two basic steps (order does not matter): add a Port  
Mapping/Virtual Server rule that forwards specified services to a single LAN or DMZ host to  
be accessible through a WAN IP not used by the DFL-200; add a static route in the firewall’s  
routing table indicating the internal interface to which the Public IP should be mapped. For an  
increased level of protection from Network Intrusions or malicious attacks, isolation of servers  
accessible to the public from the Private network is recommended. This will ensure that if one  
of those servers happens to become compromised through vulnerabilities related to software,  
an attacker would not be able to directly access the private internal Network. The DFL-200  
provides a physical DMZ network interface specifically for this purpose. This can be  
accomplished with NAT disabled or enabled on the DMZ interface.  
Example Scenario using NAT:  
The firewall is configured using the following scheme in order to allow Internet hosts  
access to web services running on either the internal LAN or DMZ Network  
The goal is to map two internal web servers (port 80) to two Public IP addresses provided  
by our ISP.  
Host Interface  
Firewall LAN  
Firewall DMZ  
Web Server on LAN  
Web Server on DMZ  
Private IP  
192.168.2.1  
192.168.10.1  
192.168.2.50  
192.168.10.100  
Public IP  
80.80.80.80  
80.80.80.80  
80.80.80.81  
80.80.80.82  
114  
 
To accomplish this we need to create the following firewall settings:  
-
-
Configure two static routes (one for each public IP we wish to forward)  
Create two port mappings (one for each public IP mapping to each private Server)  
Routing configuration:  
Static Route Configuration for a Server on the LAN:  
Navigate to the SYSTEM tab, then the ROUTING page of the Web-based configuration.  
Select the Add New link to create the first static route.  
Select the Interface that the Internal Server is connected to (LAN or DMZ).  
Specify the Public IP to be forwarded in the Network field.  
The Subnet Mask should be set to 255.255.255.255 (1-host).  
Enable the Proxy ARP feature.  
The above static route configuration explicitly defines the interface that the additional  
Public IP address should be forwarded to.  
Static Route Configuration for a Server on the DMZ:  
Navigate to the SYSTEM tab, then the ROUTING page of the Web-based configuration.  
Select the Add New link to create the second static route.  
Select the Interface that the Internal Server is connected to (LAN or DMZ).  
Specify the Public IP to be forwarded in the Network field.  
The Subnet Mask should be set to 255.255.255.255 (1-host).  
Enable the Proxy ARP feature.  
The above static route configuration explicitly defines the interface that the additional  
Public IP address should be forwarded to.  
NOTE: Be sure to enable Proxy ARP for both routes or the Firewall will not forward traffic  
destined for the specified Public IP addresses to Internal servers.  
116  
Configure Port Mapping/Virtual Server Rules for LAN Server:  
Virtual Server Configuration for a Server on the LAN:  
Navigate to the FIREWALL tab, PORT MAPPING page of the Web-based configuration.  
Click the Add New link to create a new Port Mapping.  
Input the Public IP address to be forwarded in the Destination IP field.  
Select the Service to be forwarded to the Internal Server (pre-defined or custom).  
Enter the Private IP of the Server in the Pass To field.  
Configure Scheduling, IDS/IDP, and/or Bandwidth Management if desired.  
Click Apply to save the configuration.  
Configure Port Mapping/Virtual Server Rules for DMZ Server:  
Virtual Server Configuration for a Server on the DMZ:  
Navigate to the FIREWALL tab, PORT MAPPING page of the Web-based configuration.  
Click the Add New link to create a new Port Mapping.  
Input the Public IP address to be forwarded in the Destination IP field.  
Select the Service to be forwarded to the Internal Server (pre-defined or custom).  
Enter the Private IP of the Server in the Pass To field.  
Configure Scheduling, IDS/IDP, or Bandwidth Management if desired.  
Click Apply to save the configuration.  
Click Activate Changes to apply changes and restart.  
Similar steps can be taken to configure other services to be mapped to Internal Servers for  
access from Public Hosts. Keep in mind that this configuration uses Network Address  
Translation. Not all Protocols will work through NAT, so be aware of the type of service in use.  
118  
Example Scenario using DMZ w/out NAT:  
An alternative method to that described in the preceding pages is to isolate publicly  
accessible servers to the DMZ interface with NAT disabled. This configuration requires  
multiple (at least 2) Public IP addresses to function, as the Firewall will assume one IP and  
the Server(s) will use the other(s).  
Configure the Static Routes:  
A new route must be added to inform the firewall on which interface the Public IP will reside.  
Navigate to SYSTEM > ROUTING in the web-based configuration of the DFL-200.  
Click on Add New to create a new static route.  
Select DMZ as the Interface. Enter the IP Address (WAN Network) you wish to forward  
to a server on the DMZ interface in the Network field.  
Select a 32-bit subnet mask from the Subnet Mask dropdown box.  
Be sure to have Proxy ARP enabled by checking the checkbox.  
Click Apply to save any changes.  
Modify Existing WAN Route:  
The default WAN route must be modified to enable Proxy ARP. The default route for any  
interface cannot be deleted or modified other than to enable the Proxy ARP feature.  
From the SYSTEM > ROUTING page select WAN to edit the default route of the WAN  
interface.  
Enable the Proxy ARP feature by checking the checkbox.  
After making configuration changes, be sure to click Apply to save those changes to  
RAM.  
120  
Disable NAT on the DMZ Interface:  
By default the DFL-200 is enabled to perform NAT on both LAN and DMZ interfaces.  
Disable NAT on the DMZ interface.  
Navigate to Firewall > Policy in the web-based configuration. Click on DMZ->WAN to  
modify the behavior of the DMZ interface.  
Select the No NAT – requires public IP addresses on DMZ network radio button.  
After making configuration changes click on the Apply button to save those changes.  
To allow services on the DMZ interface to be accessible from the WAN, incoming policies  
must be defined to allow those services. This can be done through the WAN->DMZ section in  
the Firewall Policy configuration section.  
Once all changes are final, those changes must be activated. Click on the Activate  
button under the left-hand-side menu. Follow the on-screen instructions to finalize your  
configuration.  
Appendix D: HTTP Content Filtering  
HTTP Content Filtering Global Policy  
Protection from malicious or improper web content is a must for Business owners and  
concerned parents alike. There are numerous vehicles for hackers to damage or take control  
of one’s PC or even Network. Malicious code may be delivered in deviously crafted ActiveX  
controls, Java Scripts, cookies, or tainted file downloads. Many times executable (*.exe) files  
are laced with spy-ware or viral programs that become active and take over after the program  
is run for the first time.  
To help reduce the likelihood of malicious software reaching the PCs on the LAN or DMZ  
of the NetDefend Firewall, filtering of HTTP traffic can be customized and enabled. This filter  
can be configured to strip ActiveX objects (including flash), Java Applets, Visual Basic/Java  
Scripts, and or block cookies. In addition, a Whitelist is configurable to define URLs that will  
always be allowed. Conversely a Blacklist is provided to allow customizable filtering of  
websites, domains, and even file types based on file extension. All of the aforementioned  
filters function simultaneously (if enabled/configured) when HTTP content filtering is enabled.  
In order for HTTP content filtering to be performed, all HTTP traffic must pass-through an  
outbound policy utilizing the HTTP ALG. Due to this behavior content filtering can be applied  
to either LAN or DMZ interface simultaneously or independent of one another. Keep in mind  
that the content filtering specifications are global and will apply to every instance of a rule  
using the HTTP ALG.  
Two configurations need to be made in order to use HTTP Content Filtering:  
- The Whitelist and Blacklist must be customized to suit the desired filtering requirements.  
- HTTP traffic on an interface (LAN or DMZ) must be bound to a rule using the HTTP ALG.  
122  
 
The Whitelist  
Items entered in the Whitelist will always be allowed through the firewall, assuming HTTP  
content filtering is enabled. This section should only be used to allow essential domains and  
servers, such as Microsoft.com and DLink.com to ensure the ability to locate and download  
critical updates or firmware is not hindered. Domains or websites entered in the Whitelist will  
not be subject to any of the content filtering functions.  
Navigate to the Firewall tab, Content Filtering section of the web-administration.  
Click on Edit URL Black List to modify or append the contents of the filtering database.  
To allow an entire domain and all sub-domains use the following syntax  
dlink.com/*  
# Allows access to the domain dlink.com  
*.dlink.com/*  
# Allows access to all sub-domains in dlink.com  
Once finished editing the Whitelist, click Apply to save changes or Cancel to clear.  
The Blacklist  
Blacklist configuration is not limited to domain names. File extensions may be specified to  
block the download of said file types. Be sure to evaluate the type of files that may be  
traversing the firewall out of necessity on a regular basis to ensure no loss in productivity due  
to invalid network configurations or network outages. Domains and/or file types defined in the  
Blacklist will be denied upon request.  
124  
Navigate to the Firewall tab, Content Filtering section of the web-administration.  
Click on Edit URL Black List to modify or append the contents of the filtering database.  
To block an entire domain and all sub-domains use the following syntax  
casino.com/*  
# Blocks access to the domain casino.com  
*.casino.com/*  
# Blocks access to all sub-domains under casino.com  
To block specific file types from download through HTTP use the following syntax  
*.exe # Blocks executable downloads  
Once finished editing the Blacklist, click Apply to save changes or Cancel to clear.  
Additional Content Filters  
The Firewall can also filter Java Applets, Java/VB Script, ActiveX objects, and/or cookies  
from reaching the PCs behind the NetDefend Firewall. These content categories do not  
require configuration other than enable or disable.  
Navigate to the Firewall tab, Content Filtering section of the web-administration.  
Click the check box next to each filter you would like to enable.  
Once finished selecting additional filters, click Apply to save changes or Cancel to clear.  
HTTP Rule using the HTTP ALG  
Now that the content to be filtered has been decided on, a rule needs to be configured for  
each interface that this filtering should be applied to utilizing the HTTP ALG. This will require a  
rework of the default outbound policy to eliminate the chance of unfiltered HTTP traffic passing  
through the Firewall. The idea is to remove the most general allow rule and configure rules to  
allow essential services such as DNS as well as HTTP to pass the Firewall.  
To disable the default general allow all rule -  
Navigate to the Firewall tab, Policy section of the web-administration.  
Select the appropriate policy based on desired effect (LAN->WAN or DMZ->WAN).  
Click Edit next to the default allow all rule.  
126  
Check the check box next to delete this rule.  
Click Apply.  
To allow DNS queries to pass through  
Navigate to the Firewall tab, Policy section of the web-administration.  
Select the appropriate policy based on desired effect (LAN->WAN or DMZ->WAN).  
Click Add New at the bottom of the list.  
Give the rule a friendly name, such as dns_out.  
Position does not matter, leave blank or choose a position.  
Choose Allow as the Action.  
For service choose dns_all.  
Select a schedule and enable IDS/IDP if desired.  
Click Apply to save the changes, or click Cancel to disregard.  
To configure the HTTP Content Filtering rule -  
Navigate to the Firewall tab, Policy section of the web-administration.  
Select the appropriate policy based on desired effect (LAN->WAN or DMZ->WAN).  
Click Add New at the bottom of the list.  
Give the rule a friendly name, such as http_cntnt_filtr.  
Position does not matter, leave blank or choose a position.  
Choose Allow as the Action.  
For service choose http_outbound (already configured to use the HTTP ALG).  
Select a schedule and enable IDS/IDP if desired.  
Click Apply to save the changes, or click Cancel to disregard.  
After clicking Apply, click the Activate button on the left-hand menu.  
Select Activate Changes Now to save the configuration to flash and restart.  
When the firewall has finished restarting, the HTTP Content Filtering Function will be  
enabled and active. Keep in mind that depending on the type of activities your LAN  
participates in, more services may need to be specified as rules in the Firewall Policy  
configuration to allow said services to pass the firewall. The steps should be similar to the  
DNS and HTTP configuration if there is a default service configured. Custom services can  
also be created to accommodate most any service needed to run through the firewall.  
128  
Warranty  
Subject to the terms and conditions set forth herein, D-Link Systems, Inc. (“D-Link”) provides this Limited  
warranty for its product only to the person or entity that originally purchased the product from:  
D-Link or its authorized reseller or distributor and  
Products purchased and delivered within the fifty states of the United States, the District of Columbia, U.S.  
Possessions or Protectorates, U.S. Military Installations, addresses with an APO or FPO.  
Limited Warranty: D-Link warrants that the hardware portion of the D-Link products described below will  
be free from material defects in workmanship and materials from the date of original retail purchase of the  
product, for the period set forth below applicable to the product type (“Warranty Period”), except as  
otherwise stated herein.  
1-Year Limited Warranty for the Product(s) is defined as follows:  
Hardware (excluding power supplies and fans) One (1) Year  
Power Supplies and Fans One (1) Year  
Spare parts and spare kits Ninety (90) days  
D-Link’s sole obligation shall be to repair or replace the defective Hardware during the Warranty Period at  
no charge to the original owner or to refund at D-Link’s sole discretion. Such repair or replacement will be  
rendered by D-Link at an Authorized D-Link Service Office. The replacement Hardware need not be new  
or have an identical make, model or part. D-Link may in its sole discretion replace the defective  
Hardware (or any part thereof) with any reconditioned product that D-Link reasonably determines is  
substantially equivalent (or superior) in all material respects to the defective Hardware. Repaired or  
replacement Hardware will be warranted for the remainder of the original Warranty Period from the date  
of original retail purchase. If a material defect is incapable of correction, or if D-Link determines in its sole  
discretion that it is not practical to repair or replace the defective Hardware, the price paid by the original  
purchaser for the defective Hardware will be refunded by D-Link upon return to D-Link of the defective  
Hardware. All Hardware (or part thereof) that is replaced by D-Link, or for which the purchase price is  
refunded, shall become the property of D-Link upon replacement or refund.  
Limited Software Warranty: D-Link warrants that the software portion of the product (“Software”) will  
substantially conform to D-Link’s then current functional specifications for the Software, as set forth in the  
applicable documentation, from the date of original retail purchase of the Software for a period of ninety  
(90) days (“Warranty Period”), provided that the Software is properly installed on approved hardware and  
operated as contemplated in its documentation. D-Link further warrants that, during the Warranty Period,  
the magnetic media on which D-Link delivers the Software will be free of physical defects. D-Link’s sole  
obligation shall be to replace the non-conforming Software (or defective media) with software that  
substantially conforms to D-Link’s functional specifications for the Software or to refund at D-Link’s sole  
discretion. Except as otherwise agreed by D-Link in writing, the replacement Software is provided only to  
the original licensee, and is subject to the terms and conditions of the license granted by D-Link for the  
Software. Software will be warranted for the remainder of the original Warranty Period from the date or  
original retail purchase. If a material non-conformance is incapable of correction, or if D-Link determines  
in its sole discretion that it is not practical to replace the non-conforming Software, the price paid by the  
original licensee for the non-conforming Software will be refunded by D-Link; provided that the non-  
conforming Software (and all copies thereof) is first returned to D-Link. The license granted respecting  
any Software for which a refund is given automatically terminates.  
Non-Applicability of Warranty: The Limited Warranty provided hereunder for hardware and software of  
D-Link's products will not be applied to and does not cover any refurbished product and any product  
purchased through the inventory clearance or liquidation sale or other sales in which D-Link, the sellers,  
or the liquidators expressly disclaim their warranty obligation pertaining to the product and in that case,  
the product is being sold "As-Is" without any warranty whatsoever including, without limitation, the Limited  
Warranty as described herein, notwithstanding anything stated herein to the contrary.  
 
Submitting A Claim: The customer shall return the product to the original purchase point based on its  
return policy. In case the return policy period has expired and the product is within warranty, the  
customer shall submit a claim to D-Link as outlined below:  
The customer must submit with the product as part of the claim a written description of the Hardware  
defect or Software nonconformance in sufficient detail to allow D-Link to confirm the same.  
The original product owner must obtain a Return Material Authorization (“RMA”) number from the  
Authorized D-Link Service Office and, if requested, provide written proof of purchase of the product (such  
as a copy of the dated purchase invoice for the product) before the warranty service is provided.  
After an RMA number is issued, the defective product must be packaged securely in the original or other  
suitable shipping package to ensure that it will not be damaged in transit, and the RMA number must be  
prominently marked on the outside of the package. Do not include any manuals or accessories in the  
shipping package. D-Link will only replace the defective portion of the Product and will not ship back any  
accessories.  
The customer is responsible for all in-bound shipping charges to D-Link. No Cash on Delivery (“COD”) is  
allowed. Products sent COD will either be rejected by D-Link or become the property of D-Link. Products  
shall be fully insured by the customer and shipped to D-Link Systems, Inc., 17595 Mt. Herrmann,  
Fountain Valley, CA 92708. D-Link will not be held responsible for any packages that are lost in transit  
to D-Link. The repaired or replaced packages will be shipped to the customer via UPS Ground or any  
common carrier selected by D-Link, with shipping charges prepaid. Expedited shipping is available if  
shipping charges are prepaid by the customer and upon request.  
D-Link may reject or return any product that is not packaged and shipped in strict compliance with the  
foregoing requirements, or for which an RMA number is not visible from the outside of the package. The  
product owner agrees to pay D-Link’s reasonable handling and return shipping charges for any product  
that is not packaged and shipped in accordance with the foregoing requirements, or that is determined by  
D-Link not to be defective or non-conforming.  
What Is Not Covered: This limited warranty provided by D-Link does not cover: Products, if in D-Link’s  
judgment, have been subjected to abuse, accident, alteration, modification, tampering, negligence,  
misuse, faulty installation, lack of reasonable care, repair or service in any way that is not contemplated in  
the documentation for the product, or if the model or serial number has been altered, tampered with,  
defaced or removed; Initial installation, installation and removal of the product for repair, and shipping  
costs; Operational adjustments covered in the operating manual for the product, and normal maintenance;  
Damage that occurs in shipment, due to act of God, failures due to power surge, and cosmetic damage;  
Any hardware, software, firmware or other products or services provided by anyone other than D-Link;  
Products that have been purchased from inventory clearance or liquidation sales or other sales in which  
D-Link, the sellers, or the liquidators expressly disclaim their warranty obligation pertaining to the product.  
Repair by anyone other than D-Link or an Authorized D-Link Service Office will void this Warranty.  
Disclaimer of Other Warranties: EXCEPT FOR THE LIMITED WARRANTY SPECIFIED HEREIN, THE  
PRODUCT IS PROVIDED “AS-IS” WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY OF ANY KIND WHATSOEVER  
INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A  
PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NON-INFRINGEMENT. IF ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY CANNOT BE  
DISCLAIMED IN ANY TERRITORY WHERE A PRODUCT IS SOLD, THE DURATION OF SUCH  
IMPLIED WARRANTY SHALL BE LIMITED TO NINETY (90) DAYS. EXCEPT AS EXPRESSLY  
COVERED UNDER THE LIMITED WARRANTY PROVIDED HEREIN, THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE  
QUALITY, SELECTION AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PRODUCT IS WITH THE PURCHASER OF  
THE PRODUCT.  
130  
Limitation of Liability: TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY LAW, D-LINK IS NOT LIABLE  
UNDER ANY CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE, STRICT LIABILITY OR OTHER LEGAL OR EQUITABLE  
THEORY FOR ANY LOSS OF USE OF THE PRODUCT, INCONVENIENCE OR DAMAGES OF ANY  
CHARACTER, WHETHER DIRECT, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL (INCLUDING, BUT  
NOT LIMITED TO, DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF GOODWILL, LOSS OF REVENUE OR PROFIT, WORK  
STOPPAGE, COMPUTER FAILURE OR MALFUNCTION, FAILURE OF OTHER EQUIPMENT OR  
COMPUTER PROGRAMS TO WHICH D-LINK’S PRODUCT IS CONNECTED WITH, LOSS OF  
INFORMATION OR DATA CONTAINED IN, STORED ON, OR INTEGRATED WITH ANY PRODUCT  
RETURNED TO D-LINK FOR WARRANTY SERVICE) RESULTING FROM THE USE OF THE  
PRODUCT, RELATING TO WARRANTY SERVICE, OR ARISING OUT OF ANY BREACH OF THIS  
LIMITED WARRANTY, EVEN IF D-LINK HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH  
DAMAGES. THE SOLE REMEDY FOR A BREACH OF THE FOREGOING LIMITED WARRANTY IS  
REPAIR, REPLACEMENT OR REFUND OF THE DEFECTIVE OR NON-CONFORMING PRODUCT.  
THE MAXIMUM LIABILITY OF D-LINK UNDER THIS WARRANTY IS LIMITED TO THE PURCHASE  
PRICE OF THE PRODUCT COVERED BY THE WARRANTY. THE FOREGOING EXPRESS WRITTEN  
WARRANTIES AND REMEDIES ARE EXCLUSIVE AND ARE IN LIEU OF ANY OTHER WARRANTIES  
OR REMEDIES, EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR STATUTORY  
Governing Law: This Limited Warranty shall be governed by the laws of the State of California. Some  
states do not allow exclusion or limitation of incidental or consequential damages, or limitations on how  
long an implied warranty lasts, so the foregoing limitations and exclusions may not apply. This limited  
warranty provides specific legal rights and the product owner may also have other rights which vary from  
state to state.  
Trademarks: D-Link is a registered trademark of D-Link Systems, Inc. Other trademarks or registered  
trademarks are the property of their respective manufacturers or owners.  
Copyright Statement: No part of this publication or documentation accompanying this  
Product may be reproduced in any form or by any means or used to make any derivative such  
as translation, transformation, or adaptation without permission from D-Link Corporation/D-  
Link Systems, Inc., as stipulated by the United States Copyright Act of 1976. Contents are  
subject to change without prior notice. Copyright© 2005 by D-Link Corporation/D-Link  
Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.  
CE Mark Warning: This is a Class A product. In an Industrial environment, this product may cause radio  
interference, in which case the user may be required to take adequate measures.  
FCC Statement: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the  
limits for a Class A digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These  
limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful  
interference in an industrial installation. This equipment generates, uses, and  
can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in  
accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio  
communication. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not  
occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful  
interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by  
turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the  
interference by one or more of the following measures:  
Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.  
Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.  
Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected.  
Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help.  
For detailed warranty outside the United States, please contact corresponding local D-  
Link office.  
132  

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