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Security Basics
2 firewalls protecting internal network May 24 2012 04:45AM marco cohen (marcocohen2 gmail com) (7 replies) RE: 2 firewalls protecting internal network May 24 2012 04:50PM David Gillett (gillettdavid fhda edu) RE: 2 firewalls protecting internal network May 24 2012 04:25PM Mike Vella (mike bakerross co uk) (1 replies) Re: 2 firewalls protecting internal network May 24 2012 04:56PM Ferreira, Steve G. (sferreira mitre org) Re: 2 firewalls protecting internal network May 24 2012 03:36PM Stephanus J Alex Taidri (securityfocus ae taidri com) |
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> each from different vendor.
>
> what you think about it ? is it practical?
Whether it's practical depends in part on the complexity of the environment and of the firewall rules. But even using a single vendor, there are gains that can be had. Rather than running 25 interfaces on a single firewall, with 300+ rules, splitting the implementation can simplify the rules, and reduce the hardware performance requirement. Two $5000 boxes might replace one $25,000 box. A 300 rule policy might be replaced by two 100 rule policies.
One firewall connects to external-facing DMZ networks and the internet, another divides internal business units with different security requirements from one another, segregates server networks from user networks, or test environments from production, etc. A separate firewall might reside in one business unit for connections to their external partners. One drawback is that connections that traverse multiple firewalls require a rule on each. I find this to be less of a problem than the overall reduction in complexity of the rules on each firewall.
Another benefit might be to reduce the impact of maintenance downtime, and increase your flexibility in scheduling change windows. Consolidating everything into a single box subjects you to the lowest common denominator / most restrictive change policy for all connections on that box. Isolating those restrictive policies on a separate firewall could allow more flexibility for administering the other systems.
As always, YMMV, and probably will.
Dan Lynch, CISSP
Information Technology Analyst
County of Placer
Auburn, CA
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Securing Apache Web Server with thawte Digital Certificate
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