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-rw-r--r--docs/quick-start.rst11
1 files changed, 5 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/docs/quick-start.rst b/docs/quick-start.rst
index d3291070..6935e951 100644
--- a/docs/quick-start.rst
+++ b/docs/quick-start.rst
@@ -141,7 +141,7 @@ networks, addresses, ports, and domains that describe different parts of
our network. We can then use them for filtering within our firewall rulesets,
allowing for more concise and readable configuration.
-In this case, we will create two interface groups—a ``WAN`` group for our
+In this case, we will create two interface groups — a ``WAN`` group for our
interfaces connected to the public internet and a ``LAN`` group for the
interfaces connected to our internal network. Additionally, we will create a
network group, ``NET-INSIDE-v4``, that contains our internal subnet.
@@ -156,7 +156,7 @@ Configure Stateful Packet Filtering
-----------------------------------
With the new firewall structure, we have have a lot of flexibility in how we
-group and order our rules, as shown by the two alternative approaches below.
+group and order our rules, as shown by the three alternative approaches below.
Option 1: Global State Policies
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
@@ -212,12 +212,11 @@ hooks as the first filtering rule in the respective chains:
set firewall ipv4 input filter rule 10 action 'jump'
set firewall ipv4 input filter rule 10 jump-target CONN_FILTER
-Option 2: Per-Hook Chain
+Option 3: Per-Hook Chain
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-Alternatively, instead of configuring the ``CONN_FILTER`` chain described above,
-you can take the more traditional stateful connection filtering approach by
-creating rules on each hook's chain:
+Alternatively, you can take the more traditional stateful connection
+filtering approach by creating rules on each base hook's chain:
.. code-block:: none