Adrian Bowen wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have a DG834 (not G), and I have not managed to get the firewall
> function to work at all yet - the default rule is as you say to block
> all inbound packets, but this actually has no effect as far as I can
> see, they are still being picked up by the PCs on the LAN. Adding
> other more specific rules to block various ports hasn't worked either.
>
> I have a static IP subnet, so I'm not using DHCP or NAT. Still
> waiting for a response from Netgear on this.
>
> Adrian Bowen
>
Repeating the "I'm not a techy" disclaimer, as far as I understand it, if
you disable NAT then you give up all the protection the router/firewall
offers. The router instructions tell you as much. Here is the text of the
"help" from the router's config page regarding NAT....
"NAT allows all LAN PCs to gain Internet access via this Router, by sharing
this Router's WAN IP address. In most situations, NAT is essential for
Internet access via this Router. You should only disable NAT if you are sure
you do not require it. When NAT is disabled, only standard routing is
performed by this Router."
Therefore no NAT = no firewall (I think).
With the DG834G you are able to reserve a specific IP address for each MAC
address of each of your devices. e.g. my laptop is always 192.168.0.3 and my
girlfriend's is always 192.168.0.2, while the Xbox gets anything else
(normally 192.168.0.4) allocated but frankly I couldn't care what it gets.
This helps allow port forwarding to the right machine when using P2P
software, for example. I don't know if this will suit your needs but perhaps
it's something to look into.
I've run a
www.grc.com port scan test and with my setup I do not exist on
any of the ports tested by Shields Up. My P2P port is reported as "closed"
(no P2P running) while everything else is "stealthed".
I suppose it's of some interest that my router emailed me (at my choice) to
warn of a possible DOS attack while the port scanning took place.