Select Rule Action Options dialog box (Allow)
Use this dialog box to override and specify the options for the Allow action in the Engine Policy.
Option | Definition |
---|---|
General tab | |
Forward Traffic To (Engine/VPN role only) |
Select a Host or Proxy Server element to forward traffic to. Click Select to select an element.
There are similar restrictions than when configuring destination NAT rules. For example, if you forward to a host, the IP address range in the Destination field of the rule must be an equivalent size to the IP address range of the host. If you forward traffic to a proxy or a host, the NAT rules are ignored. If you use NAT rules, you must configure forwarding in NAT rules rather than Access rules. |
Forced Next Hop (Engine/VPN role only) |
Enter an IP Address or select a Host to force forward the matched traffic to the preferred destination. Click Select to select a host. The IP Address can be an
IPv4 or IPv6.
Note:
|
Option | Definition |
---|---|
General tab | |
VPN section | |
VPN Action (Engine/VPN role only) |
To forward traffic into a VPN, select from the following options:
To apply the action to VPN client traffic in any mobile VPN, select Any Mobile VPN (IPv4 only). |
Option | Definition |
---|---|
General pane | |
HTTP Proxy Policy (When Explicit HTTP Proxy is enabled for the Service element) |
Select the Proxy Follow-up sub-policy that applies to the follow-up connections.
Note: You need to create a sub-policy to make it available as an option. For more details on how to create a
sub-policy, refer to the How sub-policies work topic.
|
Option | Definition |
---|---|
General | |
Inspection Options | |
Deep Inspection | Selects traffic that matches this rule for checking against the Inspection Policy referenced by this policy. Traffic is inspected as the Protocol that is attached to the
Service element in this rule.
|
Network Application Latency Monitoring | To decide whether to monitor network health and latency of connections and applications.
|
File Filtering | Selects traffic that matches this rule for checking against the File Filtering Policy referenced by this policy.
|
Decryption | Defines whether traffic that matches the rule is decrypted for TLS inspection or by the SSM HTTP Proxy (Security Engines in the Engine/VPN role
only).
|
Option | Definition |
---|---|
General tab | |
Snort Options section | |
Snort | Selects traffic that matches this rule for Snort
inspection.
|
Option | Definition |
---|---|
Advanced tab | |
Connection Options section | |
Connection Tracking Mode |
|
Idle Timeout | The timeout (in seconds) after which inactive connections are closed. This timeout concerns only idle connections. Connections are not cut because of timeouts while the hosts are
still communicating. If you enter a timeout, this value overrides the setting defined in the Security Engine properties. CAUTION: Do
not set long timeouts for many connections. Each connection that is kept active consumes resources on the Security Engine. Setting excessive timeouts
for many connections can lead to serious performance problems. Generally, the idle timeout is not more than a few minutes.
|
Synchronize Connections | Defines whether connection information is synchronized between Security Engine cluster nodes. Disabling connection synchronization reduces the
traffic volume on the active heartbeat interface, but it also prevents transparent failover of connections to other nodes.
|
Enforce TCP MSS
(IPv4 Only) |
Defines whether TCP MSS is enforced. Headers are not included in the maximum segment size (MSS) value; MSS concerns only the payload of the packet. Usually, network equipment sends
packets at the Ethernet-standard maximum transmission unit (MTU) size of 1500 (including both payload and headers).
|
Minimum | If a TCP packet has an MSS value smaller than the minimum you set here, the packet is dropped. The smaller the data content is, the less efficient the communications become due to the fixed-size headers. Limiting the minimum size can help alleviate certain types of network attacks. Typically, the value you enter is not larger than the default minimum TCP Maximum Segment Size (536). |
Maximum | If a TCP packet has an MSS value larger than the maximum, the Security Engine overwrites the packet’s MSS with the maximum value you set here. Setting the maximum MSS size might be necessary to prevent fragmentation. Typically, the value you enter is lower than the standard Ethernet MTU (1500), taking the packet headers that are added to the MSS into account. |
Option | Definition |
---|---|
Advanced tab | |
DoS Protection Options section | |
Concurrent Connection Limit per Source IP and Concurrent Connection Limit per Destination IP |
Enter the maximum number of open connections from or to each IP address at any one time. These limits are enforced by rules that have their Action set to Allow or Continue, and when the VPN Action in an Action option is Apply VPN, Enforce VPN, or Forward. Be careful to apply the concurrent connection limits correctly for the types of communication that this rule handles to avoid cutting off connections unnecessarily. |
Action | The Action that is applied to new connections if the limit is reached.
|
Rate-Based DoS Protection | Defines whether rate-based DoS protection is applied to traffic that matches the rule.
|
Scan Detection | Defines whether scan detection is applied to traffic that matches the rule.
|