F
ORWARDING
V
S
IRTUAL
ERVERS
Click the Delete All button to delete all entries.
5.
Click the Next button to go to the next page and click the Previous
6.
button to return the previous page.
There are four submenus under the Forwarding Application menu (shown
in
Figure
61): Virtual Servers, Port Triggering, DMZ, and UPnP. Click
any of them and you will be able to configure the corresponding function.
Figure 61: The Forwarding Menu
Select Forwarding->Virtual Servers from the menu; you can view and
add virtual servers in the next screen (as shown in
servers can be used for setting up public services on your LAN, such as
DNS, Email and FTP. A virtual server is defined as a service port, and all
requests from the Internet to this service port will be redirected to the
computer specified by the server IP. Any PC that was used for a virtual
server must have a static or reserved IP Address because its IP Address
may be changed when using the DHCP function.
Figure 62: Virtual Servers
Service Port - The number of an external port. You can type a service
◆
port or a range of service ports (in XXX – YYY format, XXX is the start
port number, YYY is the end port number).
IP Address - The IP Address of the PC providing the service
◆
application.
◆
Protocol - The protocol used for this application, either TCP, UDP, or All
(all protocols supported by the Router).
– 76 –
| Configuring the Router
C
4
HAPTER
Figure
62). Virtual
Forwarding
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