ZyXEL p-662h-61 Guia Do Utilizador

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Prestige 662HW Series User’s Guide
Chapter 13 Firewalls
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Firewalls
This chapter gives some background information on firewalls and introduces the Prestige
firewall.
13.1  Firewall Overview
Originally, the term firewall referred to a construction technique designed to prevent the 
spread of fire from one room to another. The networking term “firewall” is a system or group 
of systems that enforces an access-control policy between two networks. It may also be 
defined as a mechanism used to protect a trusted network from an untrusted network. Of 
course, firewalls cannot solve every security problem. A firewall is one of the mechanisms 
used to establish a network security perimeter in support of a network security policy. It should 
never be the only mechanism or method employed. For a firewall to guard effectively, you 
must design and deploy it appropriately. This requires integrating the firewall into a broad 
information-security policy. In addition, specific policies must be implemented within the 
firewall itself. 
13.2  Types of Firewalls
There are three main types of firewalls:
• Packet Filtering Firewalls
• Application-level Firewalls
• Stateful Inspection Firewalls
13.2.1  Packet Filtering Firewalls
Packet filtering firewalls restrict access based on the source/destination computer network 
address of a packet and the type of application. 
13.2.2  Application-level Firewalls
Application-level firewalls restrict access by serving as proxies for external servers. Since they 
use programs written for specific Internet services, such as HTTP, FTP and telnet, they can 
evaluate network packets for valid application-specific data. Application-level gateways have 
a number of general advantages over the default mode of permitting application traffic directly 
to internal hosts: