Netgear 14200260 Manual Do Utilizador

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Configure Advanced Features 
119
 AC1900, N900, and N450 WiFi Cable Data Gateways
Destination port number. 5678, which is the browser session that made the initial 
request
6. 
When you finish your browser session, your cable data gateway eventually detects a period 
of inactivity in the communications and removes the session information from its session 
table. Incoming traffic is no longer accepted on port number 33333.
Port Triggering to Open Incoming Ports
Some application servers (such as FTP and IRC servers) send replies to multiple port 
numbers. Using the port triggering function of your cable data gateway, you can tell the cable 
data gateway to open more incoming ports when a particular outgoing port originates a 
session.
An example is Internet Relay Chat (IRC). Your computer connects to an IRC server at 
destination port 6667. The IRC server not only responds to your originating source port but 
also sends an “identify” message to your computer on port 113. Using port triggering, you can 
tell the cable data gateway, “When you initiate a session with destination port 6667, you must 
also allow incoming traffic on port 113 to reach the originating computer.” The following 
sequence shows the effects of this port triggering rule:
1. 
You open an IRC client program to start a chat session on your computer. 
2. 
Your IRC client composes a request message to an IRC server using a destination port 
number of 6667, the standard port number for an IRC server process. Your computer then 
sends this request message to your cable data gateway.
3. 
Your cable data gateway creates an entry in its internal session table describing this 
communication session between your computer and the IRC server. Your cable data 
gateway stores the original information, performs Network Address Translation (NAT) on the 
source address and port, and sends this request message through the Internet to the IRC 
server. 
4. 
When the cable data gateway detects the port triggering rule and the destination port 
number of 6667, it creates an additional session entry to send any incoming port 113 traffic 
to your computer.
5. 
The IRC server sends a return message to your cable data gateway using the 
NAT-assigned source port (for example, port 33333) as the destination port and sends an 
“identify” message to your cable data gateway with destination port 113.
6. 
When your cable data gateway detects the incoming message to destination port 33333, it 
checks its session table for an active session for port number 33333. Finding an active 
session, the cable data gateway restores the original address information replaced by NAT 
and sends this reply message to your computer.
7. 
When your cable data gateway detects the incoming message to destination port 113, it 
checks its session table and learns that an active session for port 113 is associated with 
your computer. The cable data gateway replaces the message’s destination IP address 
with your computer’s IP address and forwards the message to your computer.
8. 
When you finish your chat session, your cable data gateway eventually detects a period of 
inactivity in the communications. The cable data gateway then removes the session 
information from its session table and incoming traffic is no longer accepted on port numbers 
33333 or 113.