Security Basics mailing list archives

PIX Question


From: jamesworld () intelligencia com
Date: Thu, 14 Nov 2002 07:23:42 -0600


You need no protection.  The PIX will withstand what is put against it.
All the advice you are receiving about BDS fw, IOS FW and the like doesn't address your specific need.

Key being. You are terminating IPSEC. You put another FW in front and you risk losing the IPSEC.

I work with PIX daily.  It needs no protection.
Telnet:
As far at telnet (you cannot telnet to the outside of a PIX- impossible)
PDM:
Set up access via the command: http <host_IP_address> 255.255.255.255 outside
for each host you want to have access from.
Better yet, open none of that and VPN to the PIX and then use telnet/ssh/pdm from inside the VPN tunnel.

Don't run CBAC unless you have a 3600 series router or above.

If you really want protection that the PIX does not provide, get your ISP to limit the ICMP traffic to a max of 20 % of incoming traffic. help protect against DDOS

Got questions, email me offline


Sent: Monday, November 04, 2002 8:47 PM
To: security-basics () security-focus com
Subject: Protecting PIX Firewall at the Perimeter Router


Hi All,


I wanted some suggestions\practical experiences for protecting a
Firewall wall at the Perimeter Router Level.


We have a PIX Firewall connected to our Cisco Router, which is
connected to the Internet. Should there be any IOS Firewall Rules in
the Router, other than blocking Telnet,FTP etc to the Firewall itself
?


PIX will be doing NAT, protecting DMZ machines, and IPSec
connections.


Regards \\ Naman






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