Billion Electric Company BIPAC 8500 User Manual

Page of 119
Billion BIPAC-8500 / 8520 SHDSL VPN Firewall Bridge / Router 
 
 
Chapter 4: Configuration 
 
 
 
Virtual Server (“Port Forwarding”) 
In TCP/IP and UDP networks a port is a 16-bit number used to identify which application 
program (usually a server) incoming connections should be delivered to. Some ports have 
numbers that are pre-assigned to them by the IANA (the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority), 
and these are referred to as “well-known ports”. Servers follow the well-known port assignments 
so clients can locate them. 
 
If you wish to run a server on your network that can be accessed from the WAN (i.e. from other 
machines on the Internet that are outside your local network), or any application that can accept 
incoming connections (e.g. Peer-to-peer/P2P software such as instant messaging applications 
and P2P file-sharing applications) and are using NAT (Network Address Translation), then you 
will usually need to configure your router to forward these incoming connection attempts using 
specific ports to the PC on your network running the application. You will also need to use port 
forwarding if you want to host an online game server. 
The reason for this is that when using NAT, your publicly accessible IP address will be used by 
and point to your router, which then needs to deliver all traffic to the private IP addresses used 
by your PCs. Please see the WAN configuration section of this manual for more information on 
NAT. 
 
The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) is the central coordinator for the assignment 
of unique parameter values for Internet protocols. Port numbers range from 0 to 65535, but only 
ports numbers 0 to 1023 are reserved for privileged services and are designated as “well-known 
ports”. The registered ports are numbered from 1024 through 49151. The remaining ports, 
referred to as dynamic ports or private ports, are numbered from 49152 through 65535. 
 
Examples of well-known and registered port numbers are shown in Table 4, for further 
information, please see IANA’s website at: 
 
For help on determining which private port numbers are used by common applications on this 
list, please see the FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions) at: 
http://www.billion.com 
 
Table 4: Well-know and registered Ports 
 
Port Number 
 
Protocol Description 
20 TCP 
FTP 
Data 
21 TCP 
FTP 
Control 
22 
TCP & UDP 
SSH Remote Login Protocol 
23 TCP 
Telnet 
25 
TCP 
SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) 
53 
TCP & UDP 
DNS (Domain Name Server) 
69 
UDP 
TFTP (Trivial File Transfer Protocol) 
101