Connecting Airwall Gateways using a DHCP server
Use the DHCP server advanced connection method when connecting a large number of Airwall Gateways at once.
- Plug in the Airwall Gateway – Locate the Airwall Gateway in an area that complies with the safe operating guidelines, and then plug it in or apply power.
- Check DHCP – Ensure there is a DHCP server and a DNS resolver or DNS server for the local domain that is accessible on the shared network.
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Create a DNS SRV record – On the DNS server, check that there is (or
have a network administrator add) a SRV record pointing to the Conductor
URL:
_service._proto.name TTL class SRV priority weight port target
For example, if your shared network domain is me.com and the Conductor hostname is cond-01, then the SRV record should be:_ifmap._tcp.example.com. 3600 IN SRV 10 0 8096 cond-01.me.com
*Use the TTL, priority and weight for your DNS environment. Port 8096 is the default, but you can change it in the Conductor and set it to an alternate port.
- Connect to your network – Connect the Airwall Gateway to a network shared with the Conductor using Port 1 (your company network or the Internet). The DHCP server assigns an IP address, netmask, and a default gateway to the Airwall Gateway. The Airwall Gateway then does an DNS lookup and configures itself using the Conductor address.
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Ping the Conductor URL – Check that you can reach the Conductor by
pinging it. Enter:
ping my-conductor.tempered.com
- Connect to devices – Connect the devices you want to protect to the Airwall Gateway on Port 2.