Input and output filters—source and destination, Adding filters to a filter set – Netopia R7200 User Manual

Page 164

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14-14 User’s Reference Guide

Input and output filters—source and destination

There are two kinds of filters you can add to a filter set: input and output. Input filters check packets received
from the Internet, destined for your network. Output filters check packets transmitted from your network to the
Internet.

Packets in the Netopia R7200 pass through an input filter if they originate in the WAN and through an output filter if they’re
being sent out to the WAN.

The process for adding input and output filters is exactly the same. The main difference between the two
involves their reference to source and destination. From the perspective of an input filter, your local network is
the destination of the packets it checks, and the remote network is their source. From the perspective of an
output filter, your local network is the source of the packets, and the remote network is their destination.

Adding filters to a filter set

In this section you’ll learn how to add an input filter to a filter set. Adding an output filter works exactly the same
way, providing you keep the different source and destination perspectives in mind.

To add an input filter, select Add Input Filter in the Add IP Filter Set screen. The Add Filter screen appears. (To
add an output filter, select Add Output Filter.)

Type of filter

Source means

Destination means

Input filter

The remote network

The local network

Output filter

The local network

The remote network

The Netopia R-Series Router

input filter

output filter

LAN

WAN

packet

packet

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