Adding schedules to policies, Virtual ips, Virtual – Fortinet FortiGate 4000 User Manual

Page 213

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Firewall configuration

Virtual IPs

FortiGate-4000 Installation and Configuration Guide

213

Adding schedules to policies

After you create schedules, you can add them to policies to schedule when the
policies are active. You can add the new schedules to policies when you create the
policy, or you can edit existing policies and add a new schedule to them.

To add a schedule to a policy

1

Go to Firewall > Policy.

2

Create a new policy or edit a policy to change its schedule.

3

Configure the policy as required.

4

Add a schedule by selecting it from the Schedule list.

5

Select OK to save the policy.

6

Arrange the policy in the policy list to have the effect that you expect.

For example, to use a one-time schedule to deny access to a policy, add a policy that
matches the policy to be denied in every way. Choose the one-time schedule that you
added and set Action to DENY. Then place the policy containing the one-time
schedule in the policy list above the policy to be denied.

Virtual IPs

Use virtual IPs to access IP addresses on a destination network that are hidden from
the source network by NAT security policies. To allow connections between these
networks, you must create a mapping between an address on the source network and
the real address on the destination network. This mapping is called a virtual IP.

For example, if the computer hosting your web server is located on your internal
network, it might have a private IP address such as 192.168.1.34. To get packets from
the Internet to the web server, you must have an external address for the web server
on the Internet. You must then add a virtual IP to the firewall that maps the external IP
address of the web server to the actual address of the web server on the internal
network. To allow connections from the Internet to the web server, you must then add
an External->Internal firewall policy and set Destination to the virtual IP.
You can create two types of virtual IPs:

Static NAT

Used to translate an address on a source network to a hidden address on a

destination network. Static NAT translates the source address of return

packets to the address on the source network.

Port Forwarding Used to translate an address and a port number on a source network to a

hidden address and, optionally, a different port number on a destination

network. Using port forwarding you can also route packets with a specific

port number and a destination address that matches the IP address of the

interface that receives the packets. This technique is called port forwarding

or port address translation (PAT). You can also use port forwarding to change

the destination port of the forwarded packets.

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