Best Linux firewall
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@scottalanmiller Yes, have used it in one of my freelance project. They wanted an AD replacement as they couldn't afford windows licensing.
After some research, I tried Zentyal. It was a real good alternative for Windows AD.
Got a decent desktop machine, installed Zentyal, configured as main DC, joined all clients machines from 3 offices, (all nearby, and has shared connection from their main office). Also enabled jabber server+file server. All offices are using this without any issues. AD+Chat+File Server!
If am not mistaken, its Ubuntu based. Even though it has quite a lot of features including firewall, I never used it as a firewall. -
@scottalanmiller so was ClearOS.
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I'd recommend pfSense. I'm only an intern level tech person, and I find it fairly easy to work with.
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@Mike-Ralston said:
I'd recommend pfSense. I'm only an intern level tech person, and I find it fairly easy to work with.
For a straight firewall, pfSense is good. If you're looking for something closer to a UTM, Untangle becomes a better option.
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Really only the paid for version of Untangle. I've used Untangle and it is a seriously weak product.
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@scottalanmiller said:
Really only the paid for version of Untangle. I've used Untangle and it is a seriously weak product.
Only $50/month and you get content filtering, multi-WAN, IPS, antivirus, application-level control, bandwidth shaping, and more.
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@Nara said:
@scottalanmiller said:
Really only the paid for version of Untangle. I've used Untangle and it is a seriously weak product.
Only $50/month and you get content filtering, multi-WAN, IPS, antivirus, application-level control, bandwidth shaping, and more.
$50/mo is a ton for an SMB. Considering you have to buy hardware to put the appliance on, that's $600/year. You can get some pretty nice systems for that price.
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For that price you could be in a fully supported Meraki, for example, and that's far from a cheap device. It would take less than two years to pay it off assuming you were running your Untangle on free hardware that you already owned.
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For only $99, you can have one of these running Vyatta: http://www.amazon.com/EdgeRouter-ERLite-3-512MB-Ethernet-Router/dp/B00CPRVF5K
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$89 plus shipping from Baltic networks, so depending on your Amazon shipping rates. That may be a better place to buy it.
I love the ERL. I have 10 of them in production around various clients.http://www.balticnetworks.com/manufacturers/ubiquiti/edgemax-routers.html
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@JaredBusch said:
$89 plus shipping from Baltic networks, so depending on your Amazon shipping rates. That may be a better place to buy it.
I love the ERL. I have 10 of them in production around various clients.http://www.balticnetworks.com/manufacturers/ubiquiti/edgemax-routers.html
Do the bigger, rack mount models have better throughput? What can the Lite push?
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@scottalanmiller the ERL and ERPOE are 1 billion packets per second (pps). The ER is 2 billions pps and the ER Pro is 2+ billion pps. This is all according to their spec sheets. I have never stressed tested anything. My clients couldn't stress and ERL if they tried.
http://www.ubnt.com/edgemax#edge-router-lite -
I wish that there was a ERL that was rack mount. That would be way better.
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@scottalanmiller said:
I wish that there was a ERL that was rack mount. That would be way better.
You are not the only one. Only one of my install locations has a rack at the moment, but I really wish I had the option.
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Seeing the topic of Linux firewalls for a person brand-new to Linux hit Slashdot yesterday (>cough< /. is slacking)—
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@RoguePacket said:
Seeing the topic of Linux firewalls for a person brand-new to Linux hit Slashdot yesterday (>cough< /. is slacking)—
Yeah, many more answers here!
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Wow many answers. thanks. but i haven't tried yet