• When:
– Port – Select by the physical port on the router that you are plugging the modem into (e.g., "USB Port 2").
– Manufacturer – Select by the modem manufacturer (e.g., "Cradlepoint Inc.").
– Model – Set your rule according to the specific model of modem.
– Type – Select by type of Internet source (Ethernet, LTE, Modem, Wireless as WAN, WiMAX).
– Serial
Number – Select a 3G or LTE modem by the serial number.
– MAC Address – Select a WiMAX modem by MAC Address.
– Unique
ID – Select by ID. This is generated by the router and displayed when the device is connected to the router.
• Condition: Select "is," "is not," "starts with," "contains," or "ends with" to create your condition's statement.
• Value: If the correct values are available, select from the dropdown list. You may need to manually input the value.
Invert
WAN Binding: Advanced option that inverts the meaning of WAN Binding to only establish this tunnel when the specified WAN Binding
device(s) are NOT connected.
Add/Edit
Tunnel
–
Local
Networks IP Version: Select IPv4 or IPv6.
The Network
Address and the Netmask define what local devices have access to or can be accessed from the VPN tunnel.
NOTE:
the
local
network
IP address
MUST be
different
from
the
remote
network
IP address.
Optionally: A Port can be defined that will limit the traffic going through the VPN tunnel to only that port. If the field is left blank, any port will be
accepted by the tunnel.
Add/Edit
Tunnel
–
Remote
Gateway Gateway: This value can be any of the following: an IPv4 address, an IPv6 address, or a fully qualified
name in the form of "host.domain.com" (DNS names are case-insensitive, so only lower case letters are allowed). It is recommended that you use
a dynamic DNS hostname instead of the static IP address – by using the dynamic DNS hostname, updates of the remote WAN IP are compensated
for while connecting to a VPN tunnel.
Figure 137: Add/Edit VPN Tunnel Local Network
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