What happens when a rule in an Ordered Layer matches a packet and the action is Drop?
A.
The packet is encrypted
B.
The packet is dropped and no further rules are checked
C.
The packet is logged and forwarded
D.
The packet is sent to the next layer
The Answer Is:
B
This question includes an explanation.
Explanation:
The correct answer is B. In an Ordered Layer, rule matching proceeds from top to bottom until a rule matches. If the matching rule’s action is Drop, the Security Gateway drops the packet and does not continue evaluating later rules or additional ordered layers for that packet. Official R82 rule-matching examples show that a final drop match stops further inspection and the gateway does not turn on inspection engines for other rules. Option A is unrelated because encryption is a VPN/IPsec behavior, not the result of a Drop action. Option C is wrong because dropped traffic is not forwarded; it may be logged depending on the Track setting, but forwarding does not occur. Option D is wrong because a Drop action terminates evaluation rather than passing traffic to the next layer. This is one of the most important policy-layer mechanics: Drop is final, while Accept in layered policy may still require additional ordered-layer evaluation. Reference topics: Ordered Layers, Drop action, Access Control rule matching, policy-layer enforcement.
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