Adding a New Interface
The procedure and options for defining an interface vary according to the object and the network topology.
Some properties and pages are not available for certain interface definitions.
To add a new interface:
- Open the window for the Virtual Device.
- From the navigation tree, click .
The page opens.
- From the section, click and select one of these options:
The window for the selected option opens.
Configuring Connection Properties - General
The General tab defines the network connections associated with an interface.
One or more of these properties show, depending on the context.
- Interface: Select a physical interface from the list (physical interfaces only).
- VLAN Tag: VLAN tag associated with the defined interface.
- IP Address and Net Mask: IP address and net mask of the device associated with the interface.
- Propagate route to adjacent Virtual Devices: Enable to "advertise" the associated device to neighboring devices, thereby enabling connectivity between them. The Route Propagation section provides additional details.
- MTU: Maximum transmission unit size in bytes (default = 1,500).
Configuring Connections Leading to Virtual Routers and Virtual Switches
The tab for interface connections leading to Virtual Routers or Virtual Switches contains connection properties specific to those Virtual Devices.
- : Select a Virtual Router or Virtual Switch.
- Enter the dedicated Virtual System for this interface.
- The property is always defined as 255.255.255.255 for IPv4 and /128 for IPv6.
- : Enable to "advertise" the associated device to neighboring devices, thereby enabling connectivity between them. The Route Propagation section provides additional details.
- MTU: Maximum transmission unit size in bytes (default = 1,500). The minimum and maximum MTU values are:
- IPv6 MTU: 1280 – 16000
- IPv4 MTU: 68 – 16000
Configuring Interface Topology
For some interface types, you can change some or all of these topology properties:
- External: The interface leads to external networks or to the Internet.
- Internal: The interface leads to internal networks or a DMZ, and includes these properties:
- Not Defined: IP routing is not defined for this device.
- Network: Routing is defined by the IP and net mask defined in General Properties.
- Specific: Routing is defined by a specific network or network group.
- Interface leads to DMZ: Defines an interface as leading to a DMZ, which isolates a vulnerable, externally accessible resource from the rest of a protected, internal network.
Configuring Anti-Spoofing
Attackers can gain access to protected networks by falsifying or "spoofing" a trusted source IP address with high access privileges. It is important to configure Anti-Spoofing protection for VSX Gateways and Virtual Systems, including internal interfaces. You can configure Anti-Spoofing for an interface, provided that the topology for the interface is properly defined.
If you are using dynamic routing, disable the Calculate topology automatically based on routing information option, and manually configure the topology of the Virtual System.
To enable Anti-Spoofing for an interface:
- From the tab in the window, select .
- Configure the tracking options.
Configuring Multicast Restrictions
IP multicasting applications send one copy of each datagram (IP packet) and address it to a group of computers that wish to receive it. Multicast restrictions allow you to define rules that block outbound datagrams from specific multicast groups (IP address ranges). You can define multicast access restrictions for physical and Warp interfaces in a VSX environment.
|
From
|
To
|
IPv4 (defined in RFC 1112)
|
224.0.0.0
|
239.255.255.255
|
IPv6
|
ff00::
|
ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff
|
To enable multicast restrictions:
- From the tab in the window, select .
- Select a restriction type:
- Click .
The window opens.
- Click .
The window opens.
- Configure these settings:
- If you selected , enter the and IP addresses.
- Click .
- From the window, select a tracking option.
- Click and close the window.
- Add a rule to the Rule Base that allows traffic for the specified multicast groups and install the policy.
Changing an Interface Definition
This section presents procedures for modifying existing interface definitions and related features.
Changing an Interface
Interfaces definitions are always associated with a Virtual Gateway or a Virtual System definition.
To work with an existing interface definition:
- Double-click the interface in the Interfaces section.
- In the Interface Properties window, define the interface properties.
Deleting an Interface
To delete an interface:
- From the page, select the interface and click .
- Click .