Stateful network firewall
The primary function of any perimeter firewall
is to control outgoing and incoming network traffic
based on the corporate security policy.
Kerio WinRoute Firewall offers detailed rule
definition to perform stateful inspection of all
Internet traffic and enforce the security policy.
A network rules wizard assists in the rapid setup
of the firewall.
Design
Kerio WinRoute Firewall is a robust network firewall
operating at the TDI/NDIS layers of the OS. Its
deep inspection technology applied on both incoming
and outgoing communication helps provide the highest
security possible to the entire local area network,
and as well as the computer it is running on.
Traffic policy
Kerio WinRoute Firewall security is based on traffic
rules which allow configuration of packet filters,
NAT (network address translation), port mapping
and access control easily from one comprehensible
table.
The built-in configuration wizard radically simplifies
the process of creating a set of necessary traffic
rules. Setting-up the firewall and connecting
the network to the Internet takes minutes.

Intrusion prevention system
A prerequisite of ICSA Labs security testing of
corporate firewall products, Kerio WinRoute Firewall
recognizes the most prevalent intrusion and hacker
attacks. All security breaches are logged in the
security log.
Anti-spoofing
Anti-spoofing is a component of Kerio WinRoute
Firewall's packet filtering, providing further
protection to the LAN against attacks where the
intruder falsifies source IP addresses.
Firewall logging
A critical function of any security product is
the ability to record events at all times in sufficient
detail.
Kerio WinRoute Firewall offers a variety of different
logs that encompass error reporting, debugging,
user definition, status, web browsing, port probes
and so on.
Logging can be set for any rule defined in the
unified traffic rules table so the administrator
has complete control over what communication passes
through the firewall.
Protocol inspection
Protocol inspection helps certain applications
with proprietary protocols (not originally designed
with firewall negotiation in mind) to be used
securely in local area networks. Many protocols
can be scanned, filtered or modified, thus increasing
firewall restrictiveness and reporting capabilities.
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