Home Theater Server User Manual
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- About This Document
- Network Security
- TCP SYN attacks
- IP TCP syn-proxy
- Granular application of syn-proxy feature
- Syn-def
- No response to non-SYN first packet of a TCP flow
- Prioritizing management traffic
- Peak BP utilization with TRAP
- Transaction Rate Limit (TRL)
- Understanding transaction rate limit
- Configuring transaction rate limit
- Configuring the maximum number of rules
- Saving a TRL configuration
- Transaction rate limit command reference
- Global TRL
- TRL plus security ACL-ID
- security acl-id
- Transaction rate limit hold-down value
- Displaying TRL rules statistics
- Displaying TRL rules in a policy
- Displaying IP address with held down traffic
- Refusing new connections from a specified IP address
- HTTP TRL
- Overview of HTTP TRL
- Configuring HTTP TRL
- Displaying HTTP TRL
- Display all HTTP TRL policies
- Display HTTP TRL policy from index
- Display HTTP TRL policy client
- Display HTTP TRL policy starting from index
- Display HTTP TRL policy matching a regular expression
- Display HTTP TRL policy client index (MP)
- Display HTTP TRL policy client index (BP)
- Display HTTP TRL policy for all client entries (BP)
- Downloading an HTTP TRL policy through TFTP
- HTTP TRL policy commands
- Logging for DoS Attacks
- Maximum connections
- clear statistics dos-attack
- Maximum concurrent connection limit per client
- Firewall load balancing enhancements
- Syn-cookie threshhold trap
- Service port attack protection in hardware
- Traffic segmentation
- DNS attack protection
- Access Control List
- How ServerIron processes ACLs
- Default ACL action
- Types of IP ACLs
- ACL IDs and entries
- ACL entries and the Layer 4 CAM
- Configuring numbered and named ACLs
- Modifying ACLs
- Displaying a list of ACL entries
- Applying an ACLs to interfaces
- ACL logging
- Dropping all fragments that exactly match a flow-based ACL
- Enabling ACL filtering of fragmented packets
- Enabling hardware filtering for packets denied by flow-based ACLs
- Enabling strict TCP or UDP mode for flow-based ACLs
- ACLs and ICMP
- Using ACLs and NAT on the same interface (flow-based ACLs)
- Displaying ACL bindings
- Troubleshooting rule-based ACLs
- IPv6 Access Control Lists
- Network Address Translation
- Syn-Proxy and DoS Protection
- Understanding Syn-Proxy
- Configuring Syn-Proxy
- DDoS protection
- Configuring a security filter
- Configuring a Generic Rule
- Configuring a rule for common attack types
- Configuring a rule for ip-option attack types
- Configuring a rule for icmp-type options
- Configuring a rule for IPv6 ICMP types
- Configuring a rule for IPv6 ext header types
- Binding the filter to an interface
- Clearing DOS attack statistics
- Clearing all DDOS Filter & Attack Counters
- Logging for DoS attacks
- Displaying security filter statistics
- Address-sweep and port-scan logging
- Secure Socket Layer (SSL) Acceleration
- SSL overview
- SSL acceleration on the ServerIron ADX
- Configuring SSL on a ServerIron ADX
- Basic SSL profile configuration
- Advanced SSL profile configuration
- Configuring Real and Virtual Servers for SSL Termination and Proxy Mode
- Configuration Examples for SSL Termination and Proxy Modes
- SSL debug and troubleshooting commands
- Displaying socket information

ServerIron ADX Security Guide 105
53-1002440-03
Stateless static IP NAT
4
The finrst-timeout keyword identifies TCP FIN (finish) and RST (reset) packets, which normally
terminate TCP connections. The default is 120 seconds. This timer is not related to tcp-timeout,
which applies to packets to or from a host address that is mapped to an global IP address and a
TCP port number (PAT feature). The finrst-timeout applies to packets that terminate a TCP session,
regardless of the host address or whether PAT is used.
The icmp-timeout keyword indicates timeout for NAT ICMP flows
The syn-timeout keyword indicates timeout for NAT TCP flows after a SYN
The tcp-timeout keyword indicates dynamic entries that use PAT based on TCP port numbers. The
default is 120 seconds. This timer applies only to TCP sessions that do not end “gracefully”, with a
TCP FIN or TCP RST.
The udp-timeout keyword indicates dynamic entries that use PAT based on UDP port numbers. The
default is 120 seconds.
The <secs> parameter specifies number of seconds, 0– 3600. Use maximum to set the maximum
timeout value. For example, 3,600 seconds.
The max-entries <number-of-entries> parameter specifies the maximum number of NAT entries
Stateless static IP NAT
A ServerIron ADX creates sessions for Static NAT by default. You can prevent a ServerIron ADX from
creating sessions for static NAT traffic with the following command.
ServerIronADX(config)# [no] ip nat stateless
Syntax: ip nat stateless
For “ip nat stateless“ to work, the existing command, “ip nat inside source static” must already be
configured.
Example
ip nat inside source static 10.45.16.103 10.45.16.10
NOTE
FTP, RTSP and other similar complex protocols are not supported. The traffic applicable for IP NAT
Stateless are TCP, UDP, and ICMP.
NOTE
You must reload a ServerIron ADX whenever changes are made to a running IP NAT configuration.
Redundancy
The IP NAT Redundancy feature implements a separate protocol to negotiate IP address ownership
of NAT IP addresses.










