SonicOSX 7 System
- SonicOSX 7
- Interfaces
- About Interfaces
- Interface Settings IPv4
- Adding Virtual Interfaces
- Configuring Routed Mode
- Enabling Bandwidth Management on an Interface
- Configuring Interfaces in Transparent IP Mode (Splice L3 Subnet)
- Configuring Wireless Interfaces
- Configuring WAN Interfaces
- Configuring Tunnel Interfaces
- Configuring VPN Tunnel Interfaces
- Configuring Link Aggregation and Port Redundancy
- Configuring One Arm Mode
- Configuring an IPS Sniffer Mode Appliance
- Configuring Security Services (Unified Threat Management)
- Configuring Wire and Tap Mode
- Layer 2 Bridged Mode
- Key Features of SonicOSX Layer 2 Bridged Mode
- Key Concepts to Configuring L2 Bridged Mode and Transparent Mode
- Comparing L2 Bridged Mode to Transparent Mode
- Comparison of L2 Bridged Mode to Transparent Mode
- Benefits of Transparent Mode over L2 Bridged Mode
- ARP in Transparent Mode
- VLAN Support in Transparent Mode
- Multiple Subnets in Transparent Mode
- Non-IPv4 Traffic in Transparent Mode
- ARP in L2 Bridged Mode
- VLAN Support in L2 Bridged Mode
- L2 Bridge IP Packet Path
- Multiple Subnets in L2 Bridged Mode
- Non-IPv4 Traffic in L2 Bridged Mode
- L2 Bridge Path Determination
- L2 Bridge Interface Zone Selection
- Sample Topologies
- Configuring Network Interfaces and Activating L2B Mode
- Configuring Layer 2 Bridged Mode
- Asymmetric Routing
- Configuring Interfaces for IPv6
- 31-Bit Network Settings
- PPPoE Unnumbered Interface Support
- Failover & LB
- Neighbor Discovery
- ARP
- MAC IP Anti-Spoof
- Web Proxy
- VLAN Translation
- IP Helper
- Dynamic Routing
- DHCP Server
- Configuring a DHCP Server
- Configuring Advanced Options
- Configuring DHCP Option Objects
- Configuring DHCP Option Groups
- Configuring a Trusted DHCP Relay Agent Address Group (IPv4 Only)
- Enabling Trusted DHCP Relay Agents
- Configuring IPv4 DHCP Servers for Dynamic Ranges
- Configuring IPv6 DHCP Servers for Dynamic Ranges
- Configuring IPv4 DHCP Static Ranges
- Configuring IPv6 DHCP Static Ranges
- Configuring DHCP Generic Options for DHCP Lease Scopes
- DHCP and IPv6
- Multicast
- Network Monitor
- AWS Configuration
- SonicWall Support
Failover & LB
WAN Failover enables you to configure one of the user-defined interfaces as a secondary WAN port. The secondary WAN port can be used in a simple “active/passive” setup to allow traffic to be only routed through the secondary WAN port if the primary WAN port is unavailable. This allows the SonicWall to maintain a persistent connection for WAN port traffic by “failing over” to the secondary WAN port.
For a SonicWall appliance with a WWAN interface, you can configure failover using the WWAN interface. Failover between the Ethernet WAN (the WAN port, OPT port, or both) and the WWAN is supported through the WAN Connection Model setting.
This feature also allows you to do simple load balancing (LB) for the WAN traffic on the SonicWall. You can select a method of dividing the outbound WAN traffic between the two WAN ports and balance network traffic. Load-balancing is currently only supported on Ethernet WAN interfaces.
SonicOSX can monitor WAN traffic using Physical Monitoring that detects when the link is unplugged or disconnected, or Physical and Logical Monitoring that monitors traffic at a higher level, such as upstream connectivity interruptions.
Before you begin, be sure you have configured a user-defined interface to mirror the WAN port settings.
Was This Article Helpful?
Help us to improve our support portal