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| Subject: | RE: What firewall for small medical research lab |
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| Date: | Mon, 1 May 2006 09:58:44 -0500 (CDT) |
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Actually, I don't agree you guys. What do you think, how will he update his PIX !? He will need to spend a lot money for updates. The FW should just work for "small medical research lab". I would suggest IPCOP or even better ASTARO. A lot of people were talking about IPCOP (very nice fw), so I don't need to mention anything else about it. But ASTARO is an applience. There is an free HOME edition license with max. 10 internal IPs. Features ... VPN gateway (PSK,CERT) with detection of dead tunnels, IPS (snort engine), 2 different AV engines (arox. 50,- Euro a year and sig. updates every hour) for HTTP and MAIL traffic, and much much more. I'm not a reseller and this appliance has so many features, so take a look by your self on www.astaro.com . Everything is configurable through WEB (like IPCOP). Give it a shot and you will see, how good or bad this appliance is. Its linux and all features can be build by your self too, if you're good :) But you still have to buy then these AV license :) If you have more then 10 internal IPs and you would still like to use the free license and you know something about networking, it will not be a problem for you :) Have fun. - -- Kind regards, Arturas Zalenekas Network Security Engineer and Analyst On Sun, April 30, 2006 10:52, adnan@techiesonly.com wrote:
I'm agree with Damien Dinh, as he said about PIX-501, even I had used this firewall long time back and it worked fine. Moreover you can hookup a PC as a Syslog server so this PIX firewall will fwd all the packets to that PC if you really want to know what's going on inside and outside. Going for a hardware based firewall is the best idea. You can also consider 3COM firewall with VPN and they are very simple to configure. You check the prices and features for both 3Com and Cisco yourself by contacting the reseller. There are some other brands like Sonicwall, Tippingpoint, Netscreen etc but i think these are more expensive. Do your home work dude. Regards Adnan Rafik UG Leader Techies www.techiesonly.com Original Message: ----------------- From: Damien Dinh DDinh@sycuan.com Date: Fri, 28 Apr 2006 09:10:23 -0700 To: rmillisl@millis-it.com, firewalls@securityfocus.com, security-basics@securityfocus.com Subject: RE: What firewall for small medical research lab IMHO, I would personally stay away from re-commissioned hardware to be used as a primary perimeter protection device. The availability component of the CIA triad will surely be impacted through hardware failure. Additionally, configuring IPtables and OS hardening can be time consuming and an ongoing headache because you have to check the rules frequently due. OS updates add complexity as well. Your best solution is to get a PIX 501 ($300-$400); it does full stateful inspection (same function as their enterprise fw) with 4 interfaces to section out your network. It even has VPN. I have used this product for branch offices of up to 50 users and it's pretty much set and forget (almost - need to updates code once in a while). Cisco has an awesome forum on their site that product developers and CCIE frequently answers any questions you may have. Hope this helps, Damien Dinh MSNS, GSEC -----Original Message----- From: rmillisl@millis-it.com [mailto:rmillisl@millis-it.com] Sent: Wednesday, April 26, 2006 7:55 PM To: firewalls@securityfocus.com; security-basics@securityfocus.com Subject: What firewall for small medical research lab I have been asked to research what good, low cost, firewall solutions might prove suitable for a medical research lab at a local University to protect confidential patient data from outsiders. In addition to other research I though I would ask here. I realize a firewall is just one component of an overall security policy / implementation. Basically what is needed is a simple NAT box that generally keeps outsiders out, and allows authorized lab servers and workstations to access certain services out on the main building network (DNS, IMAP, POP, SMTP, HTTP, HTTPS, FTP, SSH) and through that network to the Internet (through the main building campus/network). Cost is a very important factor so suggested solutions have been: - Pay someone to set up a PC based firewall running on surplus hardware using either Fedora Core 5 and Shorewall 3.0.6 (to allow easy configuration of iptables rules). The hardware and software cost are low. The time could add up. I have considerable experience with this so this would be the lowest learning curve. Problem is Fedora with its frequent updates may make managing this more of a chore. - Pay someone to set up a a PC based firewall running on surplus hardware using either OpenBSD 3.7 or 3.8 and pf. The hardware and software cost are low. The time could add up. I have some OpenBSD experience and no pf background. - Pay someone to set up a a Linksys or D-Link broadband switch/firewall/router. The hardware cost is low. The time to set up may be minimal (Plug&Play + some common sense and provided firewall/filter capabilities). Are these a serious and secure enough solution? - Some other low cost hardware or software based alternative. What else might be out there that I don't know about that might be comparable in cost to the D-Link or Linksys options. The PC based solutions I personally have the most confidence in with respect to hand crafting a minimal OS build and hardening and patching the OS and doing rules mostly by hand. With pf there is some concern of errors introduced due to learning curve. Comments? Suggestions? ------------------------------------------------------------------------- This List Sponsored by: Webroot Don't leave your confidential company and customer records un-protected. 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