From the course: Juniper Security Policies Fundamentals

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Advanced permit settings

Advanced permit settings

From the course: Juniper Security Policies Fundamentals

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Advanced permit settings

- [Instructor] Every security policy has three basic actions that can be defined. Permit can be used to allow the traffic. Deny can be used to silently drop the packet. Reject can be used to drop the packet and send a reset message to the source. Security policies can also be configured with advanced permit settings. I'm on the JunOS terminal right now and I'm going to use the set command to configure a security policy that we defined earlier. Set security policies from-zone trust to-zone untrust the keyword is policy and the policy name which is ALLOW-ICMP-TRUST-UNTRUST then permit, I'll do a question mark. You will notice two options over here. The first one is firewall authentication and the second one is tunnel. The firewall authentication option would require the firewall user to authenticate when initiating a connection across the firewall. The firewall user is any network user who must provide a username and password for authentication. The firewall authentication method allows…

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