Secure Computing SG550
Manuals and User Guides for Secure Computing SG550. We found 4 manuals for free downloads Specification, User manual
Secure Computing SG550 User manual
Brand: Secure Computing Category: Routers Size: 3 MB Pages: 297
Languages: English
Open in a new tabSecure Computing SG550 Specifications
Brand: Secure Computing Size: 1 MB Pages: 64
Languages: English
Table of contents
- 3 Table of Contents
- 5 About This Guide
- 5 Organization
- 6 Conventions
- 6 Web User Interface Conventions
- 6 Command Line Interface Conventions
- 7 Requesting Technical Support
- 7 Self-Help Online Tools and Resources
- 8 Opening a Case with JTAC
- 8 Feedback
- 9 Hardware Overview
- 9 Front Panel
- 10 Port Descriptions
- 11 Power Button
- 11 Reset Config Button
- 11 Device Status LEDs
- 12 Ethernet Port LEDs
- 13 Physical Interface Module Slots
- 13 USB Ports
- 14 Back Panel
- 14 Power Supply Units
- 15 AC Power Supply Unit
- 16 DC Power Supply Unit
- 16 Grounding Lug
- 19 Installing and Connecting the Device
- 20 Before You Begin
- 20 Installing Equipment
- 22 Organizing Interface Cables
- 22 Chassis Grounding
- 22 Connecting Power
- 22 AC Power
- 23 DC Power
- 26 Powering the Device On and Off
- 26 Connecting the Device to a Network
- 29 Configuring the Device
- 30 Accessing the Device
- 30 Using a Console Connection
- 32 Using the WebUI
- 32 Using Telnet
- 33 Default Device Settings
- 33 Basic Device Configuration
- 34 Admin Name and Password
- 34 Administrative Access
- 34 Interface IP Address
- 35 Management Services
- 35 Hostname and Domain Name
- 36 Domain Name System Server
- 36 Date and Time
- 36 Default Route
- 37 High Availability Configuration
- 40 PIM Configuration
- 40 Basic Firewall Protections
- 40 Verifying External Connectivity
- 41 Restarting the Device
- 41 Restarting the Device with the CLI Reset Command
- 41 Restarting the Device with the WebUI
- 42 Resetting the Device to Factory Defaults
- 42 Device Serial Number
- 43 unset all
- 45 Servicing the Device
- 45 Required Tools and Parts
- 46 Replacing a PIM
- 46 Removing a Blank Faceplate
- 47 Removing a PIM
- 47 Installing a PIM
- 48 Replacing Power Components (SSG 550 Only)
- 49 Removing a Power Supply Unit
- 50 Installing a Power Supply Unit
- 51 Replacing an AC Power Cord
- 52 Upgrading Memory
- 54 Replacing the Air Filter
- 57 Specifications
- 57 Physical
- 58 Electrical
- 58 Environmental Tolerance
- 59 Certifications
- 59 RoHS and WEEE
- 60 Connectors
- 63 Index
Secure Computing SG570 User manual
Brand: Secure Computing Category: Bridges & repeaters Size: 3 MB Pages: 341
Languages: English
Table of contents
- 7 SG Gateway Appliances (SG3xx, SG5xx Series)
- 8 Front panel LEDs
- 9 Rear panel
- 9 Specifications
- 10 SG Rack Mount Appliances (SG7xx Series)
- 11 Front panel LEDs
- 11 Front panel
- 12 Rear panel
- 12 Specifications
- 13 SG PCI Appliances (SG6xx Series)
- 13 Bridged mode
- 14 Secure by default
- 14 LEDs
- 15 Specifications
- 18 SG Gateway Appliance Quick Setup
- 18 Unpack the SnapGear unit
- 19 Set up a single PC to connect to the SnapGear unit
- 21 Set up the SnapGear unit’s password and LAN connection settings
- 24 Set up the SnapGear unit’s Internet connection settings
- 25 Set up the SnapGear unit’s switch
- 26 Connect the SnapGear unit to your LAN
- 26 Set up your LAN to access the Internet
- 27 Automatic configuration of your LAN
- 28 Automatic configuration of your LAN using an existing DHCP server
- 28 Manual configuration of your LAN
- 29 SG Rack Mount Appliance Quick Setup
- 29 Unpack the SnapGear unit
- 30 Set up a single PC to connect to the SnapGear unit
- 32 Set up the SnapGear unit’s password and LAN connection settings
- 34 Connect the SnapGear unit to your LAN
- 35 Set up the PCs on your LAN
- 35 Automatic configuration of your LAN
- 36 Automatic configuration of your LAN using an existing DHCP server
- 37 Manual configuration of your LAN
- 38 Set up the SnapGear unit’s Internet connection settings
- 40 SG PCI Appliance Quick Setup
- 40 Unpack the SnapGear unit
- 40 Install the SnapGear unit in an unused PCI slot
- 40 Install the network driver on your PC
- 40
- 41 Set up your PC to connect to the web management console
- 42 Set up the SnapGear unit’s password and network connection settings
- 43 Automatic configuration
- 45 Manual configuration
- 47 Disabling the reset button on your SnapGear PCI appliance
- 48 The SnapGear Management Console
- 48 Help
- 48 Backup/restore configuration
- 49 Configuring Connections
- 50 Multifunction vs. Fixed-function Ports
- 50 SG710, SG710+: Multifunction Switches and Ports
- 51 SG560, SG565 and SG580: Multifunction Ports
- 51 All Other SG Models: Fixed-function Ports
- 52 Direct Connection
- 52 Network settings
- 53 Firewall class
- 53 Ethernet configuration
- 54 Interface aliases
- 55 IPv6
- 55 ADSL
- 57 PPPoE
- 58 PPTP
- 58 DHCP
- 58 Manually assign settings
- 59 Connection (dial on demand)
- 60 Ethernet configuration
- 60 Aliases
- 60 Cable Modem
- 61 Ethernet configuration
- 61 Aliases
- 61 Dialout and ISDN
- 62 Port settings
- 62 Static addresses
- 62 Aliases
- 62 Connection (dial on demand)
- 62 Dial-in
- 62 Dial-in setup
- 65 Connecting a dial-in client
- 68 Failover, Load Balancing and High Availability
- 68 Configure Internet connections
- 69 Internet Failover
- 70 Edit connection parameters
- 72 Modify failover levels (primary, secondary, tertiary)
- 74 Internet Load Balancing
- 75 Enabling load balancing
- 75 Limitations of load balancing
- 76 High Availability
- 78 Enabling high availability
- 79 DMZ Network
- 80 Configuring a DMZ connection
- 80 Services on the DMZ network
- 81 Guest Network
- 82 Configuring a Guest connection
- 83 Wireless
- 83 Configuring a wireless connection
- 84 Basic wireless settings
- 86 Wireless security
- 86 WEP security method
- 87 WEP with 802.1X
- 87 WPA-PSK (aka WPA-Personal) security method
- 88 WPA-Enterprise
- 88 ACL (Access Control List)
- 89 WDS
- 91 Advanced
- 93 Connecting wireless clients
- 97 Bridging
- 98 Adding a bridge interface
- 99 Edit bridge configuration
- 100 Bridging across a VPN connection
- 100 VLANs
- 101 Adding VLANs
- 102 Editing VLANs
- 102 Removing VLANs
- 103 Port Based VLANs
- 103 Tagged and untagged VLANs
- 104 Limitations of port based VLANs
- 104 Enabling port based VLANs
- 105 Adding port based VLANs
- 107 Editing port based VLANs
- 107 Removing port based VLANs
- 107 GRE Tunnels
- 108 Adding a GRE interface
- 108 GRE over IPSec
- 111 GRE troubleshooting
- 112 Routes
- 112 Static routes
- 112 Policy routes
- 113 Route management
- 113 RIP
- 116 OSPF
- 118 BGP
- 121 System
- 121 Hostname
- 121 Workgroup/domain
- 121 Administrative contact
- 121 Device location
- 122 DNS
- 122 DNS proxy
- 123 Dynamic DNS
- 123 Static hosts
- 124 DHCP Server
- 124 DHCP configuration
- 125 DHCP addresses
- 125 Address list
- 126 Adding and removing addresses
- 127 Reserving IP addresses
- 127 DHCP status
- 128 DHCP Proxy
- 129 Web Cache
- 129 Enabling the web cache
- 129 Selecting a cache size
- 130 Storage
- 130 Local storage
- 131 Network storage share
- 133 Set up LAN PCs to use the web cache
- 133 Peers
- 134 ICAP client
- 135 Advanced
- 136 Web cache with access control
- 136 Transparent web cache with access control
- 136 QoS Traffic Shaping
- 137 QoS autoshaper
- 137 QoS traffic shaping
- 139 IPv6
- 139 SIP
- 140 Configuring the SIP proxy
- 141 Incoming Access
- 142 Administration services
- 143 Web Management
- 144 SSL/HTTPS (Secure HTTP)
- 145 Upload SSL certificates
- 145 Create SSL certificates
- 146 Customizing the Firewall
- 146 Definitions
- 147 Service groups
- 148 Addresses
- 149 Interfaces
- 150 Packet Filtering
- 150 Packet filter rules
- 152 Rate limiting
- 154 Custom firewall rules
- 154 Network Address Translation (NAT)
- 155 Port forwarding
- 158 Port forwarding to an internal mail server
- 160 Source NAT
- 163 1-to-1 NAT
- 164 Masquerading
- 165 Universal Plug and Play Gateway
- 165 Configuring the UPnP Gateway
- 166 Configuring UPnP rules from Windows XP
- 167 Connection Tracking
- 167 Configuring connection tracking
- 169 Intrusion Detection
- 169 The benefits of using an IDS
- 170 Basic Intrusion Detection and Blocking (IDB)
- 170 IDB Configuration
- 171 Dummy services
- 172 Advanced Intrusion Detection and Prevention (Snort and IPS)
- 173 Snort and IPS configuration
- 174 Logging to an analysis server (Snort IDS only)
- 175 Setting up the analysis server
- 177 Access Control and Content Filtering
- 177 How access controls are applied
- 177 Enabling access control
- 179 User authentication
- 180 Browser setup
- 181 ACL
- 182 Web lists
- 182 Policy
- 185 Content filtering
- 185 Obtaining a content filtering license
- 185 Content or Webwasher?
- 186 Webwasher
- 187 Content
- 188 Antivirus
- 189 Enable antivirus
- 190 Storage
- 190 Network share
- 193 Local storage
- 193 POP email
- 193 Scan all POP email
- 195 Scan POP email for specific clients only
- 196 SMTP email
- 197 Web
- 198 FTP
- 200 PPTP and L2TP
- 200 PPTP VPN Server
- 200 Enable the PPTP server
- 202 Add a PPTP user account
- 202 Set up the remote PPTP client
- 203 Windows 2000 PPTP client setup
- 205 Windows XP PPTP client setup
- 207 Connect the remote VPN client
- 208 L2TP VPN Server
- 208 L2TP server setup
- 210 Add an IPSec tunnel
- 212 Add an L2TP user account
- 212 Configure the remote L2TP client
- 215 Connect the remote VPN client
- 215 PPTP and L2TP VPN Client
- 217 IPSec
- 217 SnapGear unit to SnapGear unit
- 218 Quick Setup
- 218 Enable IPSec
- 221 Set Up the Branch Office
- 221 Enable IPSec
- 222 Configure a tunnel to connect to the headquarters office
- 222 Tunnel settings page
- 225 Local endpoint settings
- 226 Other options
- 228 Other options
- 230 Phase 1 settings
- 231 Other options
- 232 Phase 2 settings page
- 233 Configuring the Headquarters
- 233 Enable IPSec
- 233 Configure a tunnel to accept connections from the branch office
- 233 Tunnel settings page
- 234 Local endpoint settings page
- 234 Remote endpoint settings page
- 235 Phase 1 settings page
- 235 Phase 2 settings page
- 236 Tunnel List
- 236 Connection
- 236 Remote party
- 236 Status
- 239 NAT Traversal Support
- 239 Dynamic DNS Support
- 239 Certificate Management
- 240 The OpenSSL application
- 240 Extracting certificates
- 241 Creating certificates
- 241 Create a CA certificate
- 242 Create local certificate pairs
- 242 Using certificates with Windows IPSec
- 243 Add certificates
- 244 IPSec Failover
- 253 IPSec Troubleshooting
- 256 Port Tunnels
- 257 Tunnel server
- 258 Tunnel client
- 260 Attach the USB device
- 260 USB Mass Storage Devices
- 261 Share the storage device
- 261 Set access permissions
- 263 Join a Windows workgroup
- 264 Partitioning a USB mass storage device
- 267 USB Printers
- 267 Set up the print server
- 268 Set up the print spool
- 269 Join a Windows workgroup
- 269 Set up Windows PCs for remote printing
- 273 LPR / LPD setup
- 273 Printer Troubleshooting
- 273 Print driver installation fails
- 273 Printer shows up in Printers and Faxes, but printing fails
- 274 Printing still fails
- 274 USB Network Devices and Modems
- 275 Date and Time
- 275 Manually setting date and time
- 276 Network time
- 276 Synchronizing with an NTP server
- 276 Adding an NTP peer
- 277 Locality
- 277 Backup/Restore Configuration
- 278 Remote backup/restore
- 278 Local backup/restore
- 279 Text save/restore
- 280 Users
- 280 Administrative users
- 282 Local Users
- 283 RADIUS
- 284 TACACS+
- 285 Management
- 285 GCC
- 286 CMS
- 287 SNMP
- 288 Diagnostics
- 288 Diagnostics
- 288 System log
- 289 Local syslog
- 289 Remote syslog
- 290 Email delivery
- 291 Network tests
- 291 USB
- 291 Packet Capture
- 292 Advanced
- 292 Reboot and Reset
- 292 Reboot device
- 292 Erase configuration
- 293 Reset button
- 293 Disabling the reset button on your SG PCI appliance
- 293 Flash upgrade
- 294 Netflash
- 294 Flash upgrade via HTTP
- 294 Flash upgrade via TFTP
- 295 Configuration Files
- 295 Edit files
- 296 Upload file
- 296 Support
- 297 Technical support report
- 305 Access Logging
- 307 Creating Custom Log Rules
- 310 Rate Limiting
- 311 Administrative Access Logging
- 311 Boot Log Messages
- 314 Recovery using Netflash
- 316 Recovery using a BOOTP server
- 318 Units with a hardware clock
- 318 Units without a hardware clock
- 319 Enable null modem dial-in on the SnapGear unit
- 319 Connect the null modem cable
- 319 Enable null modem dialout of the local PC
- 320 Troubleshooting
Quick Start Guide
Brand: Secure Computing Category: Gateways/controllers Size: 1 MB Pages: 16
Languages: German, English, Japanese, zh
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