SonicOS 7.1 Rules and Policies for Policy Mode
- SonicOS 7.1 Rules and Policies
- Overview
- Settings
- Security Policy
- NAT Policy
- About NAT in SonicOS
- About NAT Load Balancing
- About NAT64
- About FQDN-based NAT
- About Source MAC Address Override
- Viewing NAT Policy Entries
- Adding or Editing NAT or NAT64 Rule Policies
- Deleting NAT Policies
- Creating NAT Rule Policies: Examples
- Creating a One-to-One NAT Policy for Inbound Traffic
- Creating a One-to-One NAT Policy for Outbound Traffic
- Inbound Port Address Translation via One-to-One NAT Policy
- Inbound Port Address Translation via WAN IP Address
- Creating a Many-to-One NAT Policy
- Creating a Many-to-Many NAT Policy
- Creating a NAT Load Balancing Policy for Two Web Servers
- Routing
- Decryption Policy
- DoS Policy
- DNS Policy
- Endpoint Policy
- Shadow
- SonicWall Support
Route Advertisement
SonicWall Security Appliances use RIPv1 or RIPv2 to advertise its static and dynamic routes to other routers on the network. Changes in the status of VPN tunnels between the Security Appliance and remote VPN gateways are also reflected in the RIPv2 advertisements. Based on your router’s capabilities or configuration, choose between:
- RIPv1, which is an earlier version of the protocol, has fewer features, and sends packets through broadcast instead of multicast.
- RIPv2, which is a later version of the protocol, includes subnet information when multicasting the routing table to adjacent routers and route tags for learning routes. RIPv2 packets are backwards compatible and can be accepted by some RIPv1 implementations that provide an option of listening for multicast packets. The RIPv2 Enabled (broadcast) selection, which broadcasts packets instead of multicasting them, is for heterogeneous networks with a mixture of RIPv1 and RIPv2 routers.
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