After you defined the user on the Firewall and use VPN-1/FireWall-1 Authentication, you would:

You are following the procedure to setup user authentication for TELNET to prompt for a distinct
destination. This allows the firewall to simulate a TELNET Proxy. After you defined the user on the
Firewall and use VPN-1/FireWall-1 Authentication, you would:

You are following the procedure to setup user authentication for TELNET to prompt for a distinct
destination. This allows the firewall to simulate a TELNET Proxy. After you defined the user on the
Firewall and use VPN-1/FireWall-1 Authentication, you would:

A.
Stop the Firewall.

B.
Restart the Firewall.

C.
Start the Policy Editor and go to Manage service, and edit TELNET service.

D.
Ensure that the Authentication method is enabled in the firewall object.

E.
Ensure that there are no existing rules already allowing TELNET.

Explanation:
Remember, we have to enable the desired authentication method in both, the user and the firewall
object, in this case we use firewall 1 authentication.
Incorrect Answers:
A: we don’t need to stop the firewall to achieve this kind of functionally, actually we are loosing all
of it.
B: its not necessary to make a restart, we could make this configuration in a dynamic way.
C: We don’t need to modify the service definition, remember that user authentication has its own
telnet proxy.
E: you can have existing rules, you just need to make sure that they are below of the one that
makes telnet authentication for your users.



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