User ManualTable of Contents===============1===============1MAX 6000/3000 Network Configuration Guide1Contents5Customer Service3About This Guide29How to use this guide29What you should know29Documentation conventions29MAX 6000/3000 Series documentation set301 Introduction332 Configuration Concepts and Profiles35Using the MAX as an ISP or telecommuting hub35Using the MAX as an ISP hub35Using the MAX as a telecommuting hub36Overview of MAX configuration37Creating a network diagram38Configuring lines, slots, and ports for WAN access38Configuring WAN connections and security38Concentrating Frame Relay connections39Enabling X.25 terminal connections39Configuring routing and bridging across the WAN39Enabling protocol-independent packet bridging39Using IPX routing (NetWare 3.11 or later)40IP routing40Configuring Internet services40Multicast40OSPF routing40Virtual Private Networks40MAX profiles41Obtaining privileges to use the profiles41Activating a profile41Saving a profile42Using RADIUS42Using session accounting43Where to go next433 Configuring WAN Access45Introduction to WAN configuration46How the VT100 menus relate to slots and ports on the MAX 600046System slot46T1 or E1 slots46Expansion slots47Ethernet and WAN slots47How the VT100 menus relate to slots and ports on the MAX 300047System slot48T1 or E1 slot48Expansion slots48Ethernet slot48Etherdata slot48Serial WAN slot48V.90 S56 III modem slot48Assigning telephone numbers49Add-on numbers49Hunt groups50SPIDS (for Net/BRI lines)50How a MAX unit routes inbound and outbound calls50Configuring T1 lines51Setting the general parameters51Connecting to the Central Office switch52Signaling mode52Switch-specific settings53Front-end settings53Monitoring line quality53Supporting PBX connections53Configuring carrier-specific services54Using MAXDAX54Configuring channels55Associating a channel with a slot/port in the MAX unit56Assigning nailed channels to groups56Assigning channels to trunk groups56Assigning channels to hunt groups56Typical T1 configurations, with examples56Configuring a line for ISDN PRI service57Configuring robbed-bit signaling59Using NFAS signaling59Enabling a robbed-bit PBX with PRI access lines (PRI-to-T1 conversion)61Assigning bandwidth to a nailed link62Performing T1 line diagnostics63Configuring E1 lines63Setting the general parameters64Connecting to the Central Office switch64Signaling mode64Switch-specific settings65Defining how the MAX unit responds during call setup65Defining settings for DPNSS signaling on DASS 2 switches66Configuring DPNSS signaling66Enabling a line for Clock Source use67Setting triggers for call-completed information67Using MAXDAX68Configuring channels68Associating a channel with a slot/port in the MAX unit69Assigning nailed channels to groups69Assigning channels to hunt groups69Typical E1 configurations, with examples69Using ISDN signaling70Using DPNSS signaling70Setting up a nailed connection71Performing E1 line diagnostics72Network Terminating (NT) support for European ISDN PRI72ISDN call information72Configuring the serial WAN port73Configuring a serial WAN connection73Example of a serial WAN connection73Configuring digital modems7456K modem numbering748-MOD modem numbering7412-MOD modem numbering75Parameters for configuring digital modems75Quiescing digital modems and returning them to service76Sample configuration76Configuring V.110 modems77Routing calls to the V.110 modems77Example of a V.110 configuration77Configuring Personal Handyphone System (PHS)78Configuring ISDN BRI network cards78Specifying a name and other settings for the profile79Setting a line’s basic operational parameters79Configuring the B channels80BN Slot and BN Prt/Grp parameters80BN Trnk Grp parameter80Configuring add-on numbers and SPIDs81Typical Net/BRI configurations, with examples81Configuring incoming switched connections81Configuring the Net/BRI line for outbound calls82Displaying information about BRI calls83Configuring Host/BRI lines84Typical Host/BRI configurations, with examples85Routing inbound calls to the terminating device85Enabling the device to make outbound calls86Configuring local BRI-to-BRI calls87Configuring IDSL connections87BN Slot and BN Prt/Grp parameters88Example of IDSL configuration89BRI/LT diagnostics89Configuring IDSL voice-call support89Configuring the MAX IDSL card for outgoing voice calls90Configuring the MAX to route incoming voice calls to the IDSL card90Performing loopback diagnostics for IDSL91Configuring Host/AIM6 and Host/Dual ports92Configuring the inverse-multiplexing port93Configuring a Port Config profile94Port diagnostics95Configuring the interface to the codec95Pairing ports for dual-port calls96Enabling dual-port calls96Configuring inverse-multiplexed WAN connections97Configuring bandwidth WAN connections98Configuring an AIM call99Example of an AIM call configuration100Configuring the FT1-B&O call100Example of a FT1-B&O call101Configuring a single-channel call101Example of configuring a single-channel call102Configuring a dual-port call102Configuring inbound calls103Setting up ISDN subaddressing103Example of ISDN subaddressing configuration103Specifying answer numbers for destination host ports104Specifying host ports’ slot and port numbers in WAN channel configurations105Exclusive port routing106Using DNIS-related methods to limit incoming calls106Overview106Call routing106Limiting calls to specific dialed numbers107Limiting calls to unspecified dialed numbers108Examples of call routing108Incoming call routing state diagram110Configuring outbound calls113Enabling trunk groups113Dialing through trunk group 2 (local port-to-port calls)114Dialing through trunk group 3 (Destination profiles)114Dialing through trunk groups 4–9115Dialing through the extended dial plan116Matching slot and port specifications (reserved channels)117Configuring MAXDAX118Introduction118How the MAX determines outbound call routing118MAXDAX call-routing flowchart119Configuring channels on which the MAX unit sends outgoing calls120Configuring channels on which the MAX unit receives calls121Configuring the MAX unit to directly map channels122Configuring the MAX unit to use a specific Dial Plan profile122Configuring the MAX unit to use a caller-defined Dial Plan profile123Configuring the MAX unit to use Answer Plan profiles125Displaying MAXDAX configurations125Examples of MAXDAX configuration (T1)126Routing calls on the basis of called number127Routing calls on the basis of the channel on which MAX 2 receives the call129Example of MAXDAX configuration (E1)130Routing calls on the basis of the channel on which MAX 2 receives the call1304 Configuring Individual WAN Connections133Introduction to WAN links134The Answer profile135Encaps Options136IP Options138IPX Options138AppleTalk Options138PPP Options139Foundation parameters139Numeric parameters140Graceful shutdown and IPX Header Compression141COMB Options141V.120 Options141X.75 Options141PAD Options142T3POS Options143Timer Options143For DTE-initiated calls144Miscellaneous145Session Options145Filter-related parameters146Timing parameters146Miscellaneous Session Options parameters146DHCP Options147TCP-Clear Options147Configuring an Answer profile148Example of a configured Answer profile148The Connection profile149General Parameters149Basic setup parameters149Telephone numbers150Routing150Overview of the Options subprofiles151Encaps Options152Encaps=MPP152Encaps=MP155Encaps=PPP155Encaps=COMB156Encaps=FR and Encaps=FR_CIR156Encaps=X25/PAD157Encaps=X25/T3POS158Encaps=X25/IP159Encaps=X.32160Encaps=TCP-Clear160Encaps=ARA162IP Options162Distance parameters162SourceIP Check, RIP and Pool parameters163Multicast parameters164Client parameters164IPX Options164IPX parameters165AppleTalk Options166Session Options167Timing parameters167Miscellaneous Session Options parameters167Frame Relay parameters168Framed Only168OSPF Options169Authentication parameters169More OSPF parameters170Telco Options170Group, FT1 Caller, Data Svc, Force 56 parameters171Bill #, Call-by-Call, Transit #, NAS Port Type parameters171Accounting Options172DHCP options173Configuring a Connection profile173Example of setting time limits174Configuring Names/Passwords profiles174Example of a Names/Passwords profile configuration174Configuring PPP connections175Example of a single-channel PPP connection175Settings in a RADIUS profile176Example of a PPP connection177Enabling PPP dial-out for V.110 modems178Configuring MP, MP+ and BACP connections178The MP and BACP parameters179MP without BACP179Enabling BACP for MP Connections180Specifying channel counts180Dynamic algorithm for calculating bandwidth requirements180Time period for calculating average line utilization180Target utilization181Adding or dropping links (Add Pers, Sub Pers, Inc Ch Count, Dec Ch Count)181Guidelines for configuring bandwidth criteria181Settings in a RADIUS profile181Example of a MP connection without BACP182Example of a MP connection with BACP183Configuring Lucent MP+ connections184The MP+ parameters185Channel counts and bandwidth allocation parameters185Auxiliary password for added channels185Bandwidth monitoring185Settings in a RADIUS profile185Example of MP+ configuration186Configuring a nailed/MP+ connection187Configuring a Connection profile188Settings in a RADIUS profile188Spanning multichannel calls across a stack of units189How MP/MP+ call spanning works189Performance considerations for MAX stacking191The stacking parameters194Configuring a MAX stack194Disabling a MAX stack195Adding and removing a MAX195Configuring bidirectional CHAP support195Configuring bidirectional CHAP on the MAX unit196Setting up bidirectional CHAP on the MAX unit for all incoming calls196Setting up bidirectional CHAP on the MAX unit for selected incoming calls197Setting up bidirectional CHAP on the MAX unit for outgoing calls198Setting alternative name for CHAP authentication198Configuring bidirectional CHAP in RADIUS198Setting up bidirectional CHAP in RADIUS for incoming calls198Setting up bidirectional CHAP in RADIUS for outgoing calls199Setting up selective bidirectional CHAP with callback200Setting up an outgoing call with double RADIUS lookups201Enhanced support for MS-CHAP204LAN Manager MS-CHAP support204RADIUS support for MS-CHAP204Configuring dial-in PPP for AppleTalk204Configuring an AppleTalk PPP connection with a Connection profile205Configuring an AppleTalk PPP connection with a Names/Passwords profile205Configuring AppleTalk connections from RADIUS206Configuring ARA connections207Example of an ARA configuration207Example of ARA configuration that enables IP access207Configuring terminal-server connections209Connection authentication issues210Analog modems and async PPP connection210V.120 terminal adapters and PPP connections210V.120 terminal adapters with PPP turned off210Modem connections210V.120 terminal-adapter connections211TCP-Clear connections212Settings in a RADIUS profile213TCP-modem connections (DNIS Login)214The terminal-server interface214Terminal mode214Menu mode215Immediate mode215Enabling terminal-server calls and setting security215The modem parameters215Example of a modem configuration216Configuring terminal mode217Example of terminal-mode configuration218Configuring immediate mode218Example of immediate-mode configuration218Configuring menu mode219Example of menu-mode configuration219Configuring PPP mode220Example of PPP configuration220Configuring Serial Line IP (SLIP) mode220Example of SLIP configuration221Configuring dial-out options221Example of dial-out configuration222Configuring a Combinet connection223The Combinet bridging parameters224Specifying the hardware address of the remote Combinet bridge224Enabling bridging224Requiring a password from the remote bridge224Specifying passwords to exchange with the remote bridge224Configuring line-integrity monitoring224Base channel count224Compression224Example of Combinet configuration225Configuring EU connections225The EU parameters226EU-RAW and EU-UI226Maximum Receive Unit (MRU)226DCE address (DCE Addr)226DTE address (DTE Addr)226Example of an EU connection227Example of an EU-UI connection227Configuring DHCP services228How the MAX assigns IP addresses229Plug and Play229Reserved address229Lease renewal229Assignment from a pool229Configuring DHCP services229Setting up a DHCP server231Setting up Plug and Play support231Setting up DHCP spoofing231Configuring POTS capability on the MAX 6000 and MAX 3000232FXS line profiles233Configuring an FXS line profile233Saving alternative configurations233Activating an alternative profile233Call Routes profile234Viewing Call Routes with the DO command234Internal sorting of call routes236Numbering Plan profile239Routing outbound calls239Examples of Call Routes configurations239Examples of Rollover configurations244Example of a Numbering Plan profile246MAXDAX246Routing inbound calls247Line Status248Call Detail Reporting2485 Configuring Frame Relay249Introduction249Frame Relay link management250Using the MAX as a Frame Relay concentrator250Using the MAX as a Frame Relay switch251Components of a Frame Relay configuration251Configuring nailed bandwidth for Frame Relay252Defining Frame Relay link operations252Dialing, billing and signaling parameters253Link parameters254Timers and event count parameters254Settings in a Frame Relay profile255Settings in a RADIUS frdlink profile255Examples of a UNI-DTE link interface257Examples of a UNI-DCE link interface258Examples of an NNI link interface260Configuring a DLCI logical interface261Overview of DLCI interface settings261Settings in a Connection profile261The Frame Relay connection parameters262Settings in a RADIUS profile263Examples of a DLCI interface configuration264Examples of backup interfaces for nailed Frame Relay links265Concentrating incoming calls onto Frame Relay267Setting up a Frame Relay gateway267Routing parameters in the DLCI profile267Routing parameters in RADIUS268Examples of a gateway configuration268Configuring Frame Relay Direct269Settings in a Connection profile269Settings in a RADIUS profile270Examples of FR Direct connections271Configuring the MAX as a Frame Relay switch273Overview of circuit-switching options273Settings in a Connection profile273Settings in a RADIUS profile274Examples of a circuit between UNI interfaces274Using local profiles274Using RADIUS profiles275Examples of a circuit between NNI interfaces276Using local profiles276Using RADIUS profiles277Examples of circuits that use UNI and NNI interfaces278Using local profiles278Using RADIUS profiles280Configuring switched Frame Relay connections281Overview281Configuring a switched Frame Relay connection282Configuring a Frame Relay profile282Configuring a Connection profile283Configuring the Answer profile283Establishing the connection284Configuring 64 switched Frame Relay connections284Examples of RADIUS switched Frame Relay connections284Sample RADIUS Frame Relay Data Link profile284Sample RADIUS DNIS profile284Sample RADIUS CLID profile285Configuring a switched Frame Relay connection for an outbound call285Sample RADIUS Route profile285Sample RADIUS Frame Relay Data Link profile286Sample RADIUS user profile2866 Configuring X.25287Introduction to Lucent X.25 implementation288Configuring the logical link to an X.25 network288Dialing, billing and signaling parameters289LAPB parameters289X.25 profile parameters290X.121 and VCE Timer Val parameters292Example of an X.25 profile configuration292Configuring X.25 IP connections294Max Unsucc. calls, Inactivity Timer, and MRU parameters295Call Mode and X.121 parameters295Route IP and LAN Adrs296Example of an X.25 IP configuration296Configuring X.25 PAD connections297X.25 PAD parameters297X.3 Param Prof298VC Timer enable298Auto-call X.121 addr298Configuring an X.25 PAD connection299Example of X.25 PAD300Setting up X.25 PAD sessions300X.3 parameters and profiles300X.25 PAD commands304Commands for working with X.3 parameters and profiles304X.25 PAD commands for managing calls305PAD service signals307X.25 clear cause codes308X.25 diagnostic field values308Configuring X.25 PAD users from RADIUS310Customizing script support for X.25 PAD311Parameters and commands311X28 terminal–server command311X.25 PAD commands311Accessing the PAD by using the PAD script support feature312Configuring X.32 profiles for incoming switched X.25 connections313Net2Net circuit mode314ISDN packet mode (on-demand X.25)315Setting up ISDN D channel X.25 support316Configuring ISDN D channel X.25 support316Customized X.25 T3POS support316Protocol summary317Configuring a T3POS connection320Accessing the T3POS320Always On/Dynamic ISDN (AO/DI)321Introduction322How it works322Configuring an AO/DI connection323Configuring the X.25 profile323Configuring the Answer profile324Configuring a Connection profile to support AO/DI324Displaying AO/DI operation325Displaying whether or not the MAX supports AO/DI325Displaying active AO/DI calls326Displaying packet processing for a specific session327RADIUS support for Always On/Dynamic ISDN (AO/DI)327Accounting records for each active AO/DI call327RADIUS dial-in AO/DI profile for PAP/CHAP with a fixed IP address332Changes to show users command3337 Configuring IP Fax335Store-and-forward IP fax335Incoming IP faxes335Outgoing IP faxes336Configuring system parameters for IP fax modem usage336Assigning bandwidth for typical IP fax usage337Configuring a typical Call Route profile338Specifying the maximum number of parallel dial-outs338Configuring IP fax options339Example of an IP fax configuration for incoming faxes340Example of an IP fax configuration for outgoing faxes341Fax hangup codes and disconnect cause codes342IP fax call accounting343SNMP information about IP fax operation343RADIUS support for IP fax operation344Syslog support for IP fax operation346Redialer support on MultiDSP card for store-and-forward fax346Atlas redialer and DID support on MAX 6000 units346Specifying the type of redialer347DID on inbound IP fax calls3478 Configuring OSPF Routing349OSPF overview349TAOS implementation of OSPF350OSPF features350Security350Support for variable length subnet masks350Exchange of routing information351Designated and Backup Designated Routers351Configurable metrics352Hierarchical routing (areas)353Stub areas354Not So Stubby Areas (NSSAs)354The link-state routing algorithm355Configuring OSPF routing in the MAX357Configuring OSPF on the Ethernet interface357Make sure the MAX is configured as an IP host358Configure the MAX for OSPF358Configuring OSPF across the WAN360Configuring a WAN link that does not support OSPF361Configuring the MAX as an NSSA internal router3639 Configuring IP Routing365Introduction to IP routing on the MAX365IP address and subnet mask usage in MAX units365Default subnet masks365Subnet mask format366Zero subnetworks367IP routing table368MAX IP interfaces368Ethernet interfaces368WAN IP interfaces369Configuring LAN interfaces371Configuring primary and secondary IP addresses for the LAN371Configuring routing table updates372Configuring Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) responses372Example of configuration of a MAX IP interface on a subnet372Configuring system-level routing policies374Dynamic IP addressing for dial-in hosts374Enabling dynamic address assignment374Specifying address pools374Forcing callers configured for a pool address to accept dynamic assignment375Summarizing host routes in routing table advertisements375Example of how to set up address pools with route summarization375Boot Protocol (BOOTP) requests to other networks377Name resolution service (DNS or WINS)378DNS lists379Client DNS379Example of address resolution configuration379Configuring DHCP services383How the MAX assigns IP addresses when acting as a DHCP server383Examples of DHCP service configuration384Translating network addresses for a LAN387Single-address NAT and port routing387Multiple-address NAT388Configuring single- or multiple-address NAT390Configuring NAT port routing (Static Mapping subprofiles)391Support for QuickTime audio/video streaming393Setting and maintaining system time393Telnet password394Shared Connection profiles394Dial-out routes in a redundant configuration394UDP checksums for ensuring data integrity395Suppressing host route advertisements395Configuring WAN interfaces395Enabling IP routing395Configuring routes for WAN connections395Specify the remote IP address396Configuring numbered-interface routing396Specifying a local IP interface address396Enabling dynamic IP addressing396Assigning metrics and preferences397Configuring RIP on a WAN interface397IP Direct configuration397Settings in RADIUS profiles398Remote host requirements for WAN connections399UNIX software400Windows or OS/2 software400Macintosh software400TCP/IP software configuration400Examples of WAN interface configuration400Configuring dynamic address assignment to a dial-in host400Configuring a host connection with a static address402Configuring an IP Direct connection404Configuring a router-to-router connection405Configuring a router-to-router connection on a subnet406Configuring a numbered interface408Type of service (TOS) support for selecting quality of service410Defining TOS policy within a profile410Defining TOS filters413Examples of connection-based TOS configuration413Example of defining a TOS filter417Example of applying TOS filters to WAN connections418Configuring IP routes419Static routes419Dynamic routes420Route preferences and metrics on a MAX unit420Static route configuration420Settings in a Static Route profile420Settings in a RADIUS route profiles422Route settings in a RADIUS user profile422Connection-specific private static routes (RADIUS only)423Configuring the default route423Defining a static route to a remote subnet424Example of route preferences configuration424Dynamic route configuration425Example of RIP and ICMP configuration42610 Setting Up IP Multicast Forwarding427Introduction to multicast forwarding427Configuring multicast forwarding428Enabling multicast forwarding428Identifying the MBONE interface428Multicast forwarder polling activities428Configuring the MAX to support multicast clients428Specifying the interfaces that support multicast clients428Specifying the rate which multicast clients accept packets429Querying for active group members429Multicast interfaces429Implicit priority setting for dropping multicast packets430Monitoring connectivity problems through heartbeat monitoring430Examples of multicast forwarding configuration431Forwarding from an MBONE router on Ethernet431Forwarding from an MBONE router on a WAN link432Configuring the MAX to respond to multicast clients433Configuring the MBONE interface433Configuring multicasting on WAN interfaces43311 Setting Up Virtual Private Networks435Introduction to Virtual Private Networks435Configuring ATMP tunnels436How the MAX creates ATMP tunnels436Setting the UDP port437Setting an MTU limit437How link compression affects the MTU438How ATMP tunneling causes fragmentation438Pushing the fragmentation task to connection end-points438Forcing fragmentation for interoperation with outdated clients438Router and gateway mode439Configuring the Foreign Agent439Understanding the Foreign Agent parameters and attributes441Example of configuring a Foreign Agent (IP)443Example of configuring a Foreign Agent (IPX)444Configuring a Home Agent445Configuring a Home Agent in router mode445Configuring a Home Agent in gateway mode449Specifying the tunnel password456Setting an idle timer for unused tunnels456Configuring the MAX as an ATMP multimode agent456Supporting mobile client routers (IP only)459Home Agent in router mode460Home Agent in gateway mode460ATMP connections that bypass a Foreign Agent460Configuring PPTP tunnels for dial-in clients461How the MAX works as a PAC461Understanding the PPTP PAC parameters462Enabling PPTP462Specifying a PRI line for PPTP calls and the PNS IP address462Example of a PAC configuration462Example of a PPTP tunnel across multiple POPs463Routing a terminal-server session to a PPTP server464Configuring L2TP tunnels for dial-in clients465Elements of L2TP tunneling465How the MAX creates L2TP tunnels466Proxy LCP and authentication support for L2TP466LAC and LNS mode467Tunnel authentication467Client authentication467Flow control468Using the Tunnel-Assignment-ID (82) RADIUS attribute for L2TP468Configuration of the MAX as an LAC470Understanding the L2TP LAC parameters470Configuring the MAX471Using multiple L2TP system names472Overview of RADIUS attribute-value pairs472Example of tunnel authentication473Example of connection-based tunnel authentication473Creating parallel L2TP tunnels to the same end point475Configuration of the MAX as an LNS477Using DNS list attempts for L2F and L2TP478Using Tunnel Options to support tunneling protocols478SNMP MIB for L2TP Added479Configuring Virtual Routers481Background481Current limitations482Accessible Vrouter profiles482Creating a Virtual Router profile483Required Connection profile settings483Required Static Rtes profile settings483Disabling a Virtual Router profile484VRouter support for L2TP tunneling484Configuring VRouter support for IPX networks484Enabling the VRouter feature on IPX485RADIUS profiles48512 Configuring IPX Routing487Introduction to IPX routing487IPX Service Advertising Protocol (SAP) tables488IPX Routing Information Protocol (RIP) tables488IPX and PPP link compression489Lucent extensions to standard IPX489IPX Route profiles489IPX SAP filters490WAN considerations for NetWare client software490Enabling IPX routing in the MAX491Examples of IPX routing configuration492A basic configuration using default values492A more complex example492Verifying the router configuration493Configuring IPX routing connections494Answer profile parameters494Connection profile parameters494Settings in RADIUS profiles496Peer dial-in for routing to NetWare clients496Controlling RIP and SAP transmissions across the WAN connection496Dial Query for bringing up a connection on the basis of service queries497Netware t/o watchdog spoofing497SAP HS Proxy (NetWare SAP Home Server Proxy)497Examples of IPX routing connections498Configuring a dial-in client connection498Configuring a connection between two LANs499Configuring a connection with local servers only503Configuring static IPX routes505Settings in local Static route profiles505Settings in RADIUS profiles506Example of static-route configuration507Creating and applying IPX SAP filters508Input SAP filters and output SAP filters509Applying IPX SAP filters510Example of IPX SAP filter configuration51013 AppleTalk Routing513Introduction to AppleTalk routing513When to use AppleTalk routing513Reducing broadcast and multicast traffic513Providing dynamic startup information to local devices514AppleTalk zones and network ranges514AppleTalk zones514Extended and nonextended AppleTalk networks514MAX units and AppleTalk nodes516Configuring AppleTalk routing517System-level AppleTalk routing parameters517Answer profile parameters518Per-connection AppleTalk routing parameters519Configuring an AppleTalk connection with RADIUS51914 Configuring Packet Bridging521Introduction to Lucent bridging521Disadvantages of bridging522How the MAX initiates a bridged WAN connection522Physical addresses and the bridge table522Broadcast addresses522Establishing a bridged connection523Enabling bridging523How the MAX supports bridging524Transparent bridging524Configuring bridged connections525Bridge and Recv Auth525Station526Bridge and Dial Brdcast526Netware t/o and Handle IPX526Name, Active, and Recv PW526Bridge Adrs parameters527RADIUS bridging attributes528Using RADIUS to configure bridge table entries528Bridge profile configuration examples529Example of a bridged connection530IPX bridged configurations532The IPX bridging parameters532Example of an IPX client bridge (local clients)534Example of an IPX server bridge (local servers)535Configuring proxy mode on the MAX53615 Defining Static Filters537Filter overview537Basic types of filters537Data and call filters538How filters work539Generic filters539IP filters539Type of Service filters540IPX filters540Specifying a filter’s direction541Specifying a filter’s forwarding action542Defining generic filters543Settings in a local Filter profile543Settings in a RADIUS profile544Specifying the offset to the bytes to be examined545Specifying the number of bytes to test545Masking the value before comparison546Examples of a generic call filter547Defining IP filters547Settings in a local Filter profile547Settings in a RADIUS profile549Filtering by source or destination address550Filtering by port numbers550Examples of an IP filter to prevent local address spoofing551Examples of an IP filter for more complex security issues552Defining Type of Service filters554Settings in a local Filter profile554Settings in a RADIUS profile556Examples of defining a TOS filter557Defining IPX filters558Filtering by source or destination address559Filtering by socket number559Example of an outbound IPX filter560Example of an inbound IPX filter560Applying a filter to an interface561Settings in local profiles561Settings in RADIUS profiles562How the system uses the Answer Default parameter562Examples of applying a data filter to a WAN interface563Examples of applying a call filter to a WAN interface564Examples of applying a TOS filter to a WAN interface564Example of applying a filter to a LAN interface565Index567Size: 5.84 MBPages: 586Language: EnglishOpen manual