SonicOSX 7 Rules and Policies
- SonicOSX 7 Rules and Policies
- Settings
- Security Policy
- NAT Policy
- About NAT in SonicOSX
- About NAT Load Balancing
- About NAT64
- About FQDN-based NAT
- About Source MAC Address Override
- Viewing NAT Policy Entries
- Adding or Editing NAT or NAT64 Policies
- Deleting NAT Policies
- Creating NAT Rule Policies: Examples
- Creating a One-to-One NAT Policy for Inbound Traffic
- Creating a One-to-One NAT Policy for Outbound Traffic
- Inbound Port Address Translation via One-to-One NAT Policy
- Inbound Port Address Translation via WAN IP Address
- Creating a Many-to-One NAT Policy
- Creating a Many-to-Many NAT Policy
- Creating a One-to-Many NAT Load Balancing Policy
- Creating a NAT Load Balancing Policy for Two Web Servers
- Creating a WAN-to-WAN Security Policy for a NAT64
- DNS Doctoring
- Routing Rules
- Decryption Policy
- DoS Policy
- Endpoint Policy
- Shadow
- SonicWall Support
Sticky IP Algorithm Examples
Source IP is modulo with the size of the server cluster to determine the server to remap it to. The following two examples show how the Sticky IP algorithm works:
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