Netgear C3700 – N600 WiFi Cable Modem Router User Manual

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Specify Internet Port Settings 
88
N600 WiFi Cable Modem Router Model C3700 
How the Modem Router Implements the Port Forwarding Rule
The following sequence shows the effects of a port forwarding rule:
1. 
When you type the URL www.example.com in your browser, the browser sends a web 
page request message with the following destination information: 
Destination address. The IP address of www.example.com, which is the address of 
your modem router.
Destination port number. 80, which is the standard port number for a web server 
process.
2. 
Your modem router receives the message and finds your port forwarding rule for incoming 
port 80 traffic. 
3. 
The modem router changes the destination in the message to IP address 192.168.0.123 
and sends the message to that computer.
4. 
Your web server at IP address 192.168.0.123 receives the request and sends a reply 
message to your modem router.
5. 
Your modem router performs Network Address Translation (NAT) on the source IP address, 
and sends the reply through the Internet to the computer or wireless device that sent the 
web page request. 
Set Up Port Triggering
Port triggering is a dynamic extension of port forwarding that is useful in these cases:
An application uses port forwarding to more than one local computer (but not 
simultaneously).
An application opens incoming ports that are different from the outgoing port.
With port triggering, the modem router monitors traffic to the Internet from an outbound 
“trigger” port that you specify. For outbound traffic from that port, the modem router saves the 
IP address of the computer that sent the traffic. The modem router temporarily opens the 
incoming port or ports that you specify in your rule, and forwards that incoming traffic to that 
destination.
Port forwarding creates a static mapping of a port number or range of ports to a single local 
computer. Port triggering can dynamically open ports to any computer when needed and 
close the ports when they are no longer needed.
Note:
If you use applications such as multiplayer gaming, peer-to-peer 
connections, real-time communications such as instant messaging, or 
remote assistance (a feature in Windows XP), enable Universal Plug 
and Play (UPnP). See 
63.