Policy routing, 5 policy routing – Kerio Tech Firewall6 User Manual

Page 93

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7.5 Policy routing

93

7.5 Policy routing

If the LAN is connected to the Internet by multiple links with load balancing (see chapter

6.4

),

it may be needed that one link is reserved for a certain traffic, leaving the rest of the load for

the other links. Such a measure is useful if it is necessary to keep important traffic swinging

(email traffic, the informational system, etc.), i.e. not slowed down by secondary or even

marginal traffic (web browsing, online radio channels, etc.). To meet this crucial requirement

of an enterprise data traffic, it is necessary to consider and employ, besides the destination IP

address, additional information when

routing packets

from the LAN to the Internet, such as

source IP address, protocol, etc. This approach is called

policy routing

.

In WinRoute, policy routing can be defined by conditions in traffic rules for Internet access

with IP address translation (NAT). This approach brings wide range of options helping to meet

all requirements for routing and network load balancing.

Note: Policy routing traffic rules are of higher priority than routes defined in the

routing table

(see chapter

18.1

).

Example: A link reserved for email traffic

Let us suppose that the firewall is connected to the Internet by two links with load balancing

with speed values of 4 Mbit/s and 8 Mbit/s. One of the links is connected to the provider where

the mailserver is also hosted. Therefore, it is desirable that all email traffic (SMTP, IMAP, POP3

protocols and their secured versions) is routed through this link.

Define the following traffic rules to meet these requirements:

First rule defines that NAT is applied to email services and the Internet 4 Mbit interface

is used.

The other rule is a general NAT rule with automatic interface selection (see chap-

ter

7.4

).

Figure 7.30

Policy routing — a link reserved for email traffic

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