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* Poll on large sites that deploy Iptables.
@ 2004-06-02 19:54 Brett Simpson
  2004-06-02 22:45 ` John A. Sullivan III
  2004-06-03 13:19 ` Brett Simpson
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Brett Simpson @ 2004-06-02 19:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: netfilter

We are a large organization, 3000 plus users, considering switching from Checkpoint FW1 to Iptables. I was wondering how many large organizations (1000 plus users) are using Iptables in a production environment?

For those that are using Iptables and were previously using a commercial product what were your reasons for switching and what issues have you seen using Iptables?

Thanks,
Brett





^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* RE: Poll on large sites that deploy Iptables.
@ 2004-06-02 20:54 Daniel Chemko
  2004-06-02 21:16 ` Ramoni
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread
From: Daniel Chemko @ 2004-06-02 20:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Brett Simpson, netfilter

Brett Simpson wrote:
> We are a large organization, 3000 plus users, considering switching
> from Checkpoint FW1 to Iptables. I was wondering how many large
> organizations (1000 plus users) are using Iptables in a production
> environment?   

I can't speak for concurrent connections, but I know that stability is
pretty good for moderate loads. My network has 100 users with about 10
TB of traffic in the course of 2 months. Linux reboots are rare, but
when you do, you'll want to make sure to update any critical kernel
issues. With so much traffic, any bug could impact your setup
substantially. I can't speak for Checkpoint's qualities, so I'm not the
best reference.

I imagine the best plan would be to take up a test group and object them
to the Linux based gateways and see how THEY like it. I don't think
there should be a show-stopper unless you have a situation that isn't
iptables compatible, like some L5-7 issues, and maybe a few remote-auth
type things.

Net stats:
You can expect to reboot the server quarterly for updates (tested
beforehand on test env.)
I've never had Linux crash, so I assume the mean time error is > 1 year
if you aren't running anything too experimental.
25% CPU utilization on a P4 2.66 (not dual-threaded) when filtering
~120Mb/s of traffic
Concurrent connections exceeding 3000 have never peaked the system
beyond 200MB in the 512MB system (other non-firewall programs as well)

Things to watch out for:
Control your logging because it will get ugly
Plan for proper capacity. 3000 ppl feeding into a T-1 isn't such a big
deal, but if you're edge firewall's hosting a fat pipe, expect to spend
time tuning all of Linux/Netfilter's settings to utilize the best
efficiency. Linux perfect out-of-the-box.
The good thing is that Linux has tons of tools to help you find out
what's going on in the network.
Management time/costs will probably go up due to more baby-sitting the
system. It all depends on how dynamic you network is. The more unique
things you do, the longer it'll take to implement on Linux.

Conclusions
I know it isn't what you wanted, but I hope it gives you some idea on
what to expect.


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* RE: Poll on large sites that deploy Iptables.
@ 2004-06-03 16:59 Aldo Lagana
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Aldo Lagana @ 2004-06-03 16:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: 'Brett Simpson', netfilter

First off - like AOL, IBM, etc - all use high-end probably cisco routers
which do their firewalling - one cannot get the packet per second throughput
they need without dedicated ASIC-based router/firewalls...

Second - you come from checkpoint world...thats software only - right?  if
so, then netfilter is the equivalent...with netfilter, and added modules
(Squid, KAME IPSec, etc..) you can/will achieve the functionality that
checkpoint had/did...when you worry about thousands of users, then you will
simply have to place your netfilter firewall on a powerful box...one with
good network cards and a fast processor(s)...the same would be true in a
checkpoint implementation to support thousands of users....

short story long - netfilter has all the equivalents of checkpoint including
the hardware requirements for many concurrent connections.


-----Original Message-----
From: Brett Simpson [mailto:simpsonb@hillsboroughcounty.org]
Sent: Thursday, June 03, 2004 9:19 AM
To: netfilter@lists.netfilter.org
Subject: Re: Poll on large sites that deploy Iptables.


On Wednesday 02 June 2004 03:54 pm, Brett Simpson wrote:
> We are a large organization, 3000 plus users, considering switching from
> Checkpoint FW1 to Iptables. I was wondering how many large organizations
> (1000 plus users) are using Iptables in a production environment?
>
> For those that are using Iptables and were previously using a commercial
> product what were your reasons for switching and what issues have you seen
> using Iptables?


Thanks for the responses.

I have a few more questions:
Does anyone know of any large firewall sites? Large site would consist of 
large numbers of users, rules, routes, tunnels, or high bandwidth use.

Of those who answered the above question:
Are any of those well known companies (i.e. like AOL, IBM, etc... ) who use 
Iptables?

What version of Linux are they using?

What are they doing for support? (i.e. Redhat, IBM, 3rd party support,
mailing 
lists, etc)

How many physical firewalls are deployed?

Is it known if they converted from a commercial firewall? (i.e Checkpoint, 
NetScreen, Cisco PIX, etc)

Thanks in advance,
Brett



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^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* RE: Poll on large sites that deploy Iptables.
@ 2004-06-04 16:39 Daniel Chemko
  2004-06-04 16:49 ` Alexis
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread
From: Daniel Chemko @ 2004-06-04 16:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: Aldo Lagana, Brett Simpson, netfilter

Aldo Lagana wrote:
> First off - like AOL, IBM, etc - all use high-end probably cisco
> routers which do their firewalling - one cannot get the packet per
> second throughput they need without dedicated ASIC-based
> router/firewalls... 

Correct me if I'm wrong, but aren't (at least mid-sized) CISCO firewalls
based on X86's down to the PCI bus and Pentium derived processors? Even
Mid-grade routers are supplying VPN accelerator chips, but I think the
firewall code itself is stored in flash, executed like any other
programs. I doubt IOS uses a lot of hardware acceleration beyond the
CPU. Although I really don't know much since I haven't done much work on
them.

An example:
(http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/hw/vpndevc/ps2030/products_qanda_it
em09186a0080091b17.shtml)
Even the 535's only use PIII 1ghz


^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2004-06-04 16:49 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 9+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2004-06-02 19:54 Poll on large sites that deploy Iptables Brett Simpson
2004-06-02 22:45 ` John A. Sullivan III
2004-06-03 13:19 ` Brett Simpson
2004-06-03 13:32   ` Frank Gruellich
  -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2004-06-02 20:54 Daniel Chemko
2004-06-02 21:16 ` Ramoni
2004-06-03 16:59 Aldo Lagana
2004-06-04 16:39 Daniel Chemko
2004-06-04 16:49 ` Alexis

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