[OT] Corporate Firewall

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You can add failover via which license you buy with it..:)

Ajay Sharma wrote:
> 
> Wow.  Thanks for all the suggestions guys.  I went to bed with a list of 
> requirements and now I have a ton of more options to research.
> 
> One thing, has anyone used Astaro?  I was looking at their "security 
> gateway 220" product last night and it looked like it fit my needs:
> 
> http://www.astaro.com/firewall_network_security/asg220
> 
> It doesn't have the failover, but everything else was there.
> 
> There were other emails in regard to "size of the company" and other 
> stuff which I'll answer:
> 
>  - there's about 30 people here now, and we plan to add about 10 more 
> next year.
> 
>  - our firewall has a default deny in and out.  So we have to open up 
> ports for access and internally we have our own DNS and email so those 
> ports are closed.
> 
>  - we don't proxy any services.
> 
>  - I'm already a super busy admin/programmer so I kinda don't want to 
> babysit this thing (which is bad considering it's a fundamental 
> component of the network).  In any case, I'd rather buy a product and 
> keep it updated then have to build a home-grown type of solution.
> 
> Again, thanks for all your help.
> 
> --Ajay
> 
> Ajay Sharma wrote:
> 
>> Hey,
>>
>> The company I work for is in the market for a new firewall.  Right now 
>> we're hosting all of our own stuff (on CentOS servers) behind an old 
>> checkpoint firewall.
>>
>> I think Checkpoint is overkill for our needs and very expensive, plus 
>> I don't like the "per-user" charges of some commercial solutions.  
>> What do you guys suggest that we upgrade to?  Here are some of the 
>> features that I would like:
>>
>> 1) decent gui, either web based or a local client
>>
>> 2) usage graphs based on protocol.  So if our tiny T1 is saturated, I 
>> want to be able to find out what's eating up the bandwidth
>>
>> 3) VPN-friendly for a couple of road-warriors.  There won't be any 
>> remote offices so no server-to-server setups, just remote clients.
>>
>> 4) we have a DMZ and about 30 machines on the local network.  Everyone 
>> has a "normal" IP address, meaning that no one is behind NAT.  So it 
>> needs to handle this (which is pretty basic stuff)
>>
>> 5) high-availablity.  So if I buy two machines, one can successfully 
>> die and the other take over.
>>
>> 6) no per-user charges.  If the company hires a dozen people next 
>> year, we shouldn't have to "upgrade" our license.
>>
>> Right now we're looking at some open-source stuff like pfsense, 
>> m0n0wall, etc...  But I'm totally open to an affordable commercial 
>> firewall appliance.
>>
>> Thanks for you help.
>>
>> --Ajay
>> _______________________________________________
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>> http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
>>
> 
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every tongue that shall rise against thee in judgment thou shalt 
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