Billion Electric Co. Ltd. BIL-7401VGPR4 Manual De Usuario

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Virtual Server (known as 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 device can be configured as a virtual server so that remote users accessing services such 
as Web or FTP services via the public (WAN) IP address can be automatically redirected to local 
servers in the LAN network. Depending on the requested service (TCP/UDP port number), the 
device redirects the external service request to the appropriate server within the LAN network