NETGEAR wndr3700 User Manual

Page 85

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RangeMax™ Dual Band Wireless-N Gigabit Router WNDR3700 User Manual

Customizing Your Network Settings

5-13

v1.3, October 2009

Your router then sends this reply message to your computer, which displays the Web page
from www.example.com.

6. When you finish your browser session, your router eventually senses a period of inactivity in

the communications. Your router then removes the session information from its session table,
and incoming traffic is no longer accepted on port number 33333.

How Port Triggering Changes the Communication Process

In the preceding example, requests are sent to a remote computer by your router from a particular
service port number, and replies from the remote computer to your router are directed to that port
number. If the remote server sends a reply back to a different port number, your router will not
recognize it and will discard it. However, some application servers (such as FTP and IRC servers)
send replies back to multiple port numbers. Using the port triggering function of your router, you
can tell the router to open additional 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 router,
“When you initiate a session with destination port 6667, you must also allow incoming traffic on
port 113 to reach the originating computer.” Using steps similar to the preceding example, the
following sequence shows the effects of the port triggering rule you have defined:

1. You open an IRC client program, beginning 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 router.

3. Your router creates an entry in its internal session table describing this communication session

between your computer and the IRC server. Your router 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. Noting your port triggering rule, and having observed the destination port number of 6667,

your router 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 router using the NAT-assigned source port (as

in the previous example, let’s say port 33333) as the destination port. The IRC server also
sends an “identify” message to your router with destination port 113.

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