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User Management
1105
SonicOS 5.8.1 Administrator Guide
Configuring Firewall Access Rules
Enabling SonicWALL SSO affects policies on the Firewall > Access Rules page of the 
SonicOS Enhanced management interface. Rules set under Firewall > Access Rules are 
checked against the user group memberships returned from a SSO LDAP query, and are 
applied automatically.
See the following sections for more information:
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Automatically Generated Rules for SonicWALL SSO
When a SonicWALL SSO agent or TSA is configured in the SonicOS Enhanced management 
interface, a Firewall access rule and corresponding NAT policy are created to allow the replies 
from the agent into the LAN. These rules use either a SonicWALL SSO Agents or SonicWALL 
Terminal Services Agents 
address group object, which has a member address object for each 
configured agent. The member address objects are automatically added to and deleted from 
the group object as agents are added or deleted. The member address objects are also updated 
automatically as an agent’s IP address changes, including when an IP address is resolved via 
DNS (where an agent is given by DNS name).
If SonicWALL SSO agents or TSAs are configured in different zones, the Firewall access rule 
and NAT policy are added to each applicable zone. The same SonicWALL SSO Agents or 
SonicWALL Terminal Services Agents address group is used in each zone. 
Note
Do not enable Guest Services in the same zone where SonicWALL SSO is being used. 
Enabling Guest Services will disable SSO in that zone, causing users who have 
authenticated via SSO  to lose access. Create a separate zone for Guest Services.
Accommodating Mac and Linux Users
Mac and Linux systems do not support the Windows networking requests that are used by the 
SonicWALL SSO agent, and hence require Samba 3.5 or newer to work with SonicWALL SSO. 
Using SSO on Mac and Linux With Samba
For Windows users, SonicWALL SSO is used by a SonicWALL appliance to automatically 
authenticate users in a Windows domain. It allows the users to get access through the 
appliance with correct filtering and policy compliance without the need to identify themselves 
via any additional login process after their Windows domain login.  
Samba is a software package used by Linux/Unix or Mac machines to give their users access 
to resources in a Windows domain (via Samba’s smbclient utility) and/or to give Windows 
domain users access to resources on the Linux or Mac machine (via a Samba server). 
A user working on a Linux PC or Mac with Samba in a Windows domain can be identified by 
SonicWALL SSO, but it requires proper configuration of the Linux/Mac machine, the SSO 
Agent, and possibly some reconfiguration of the appliance. For example, the following 
configuration is necessary: