Network firewall

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'''Network Firewall''' is now considered as a first line of defense in the form of a barrier against outside attacks, which is installed on computers connect to internet. In general Firewall prevents the dangers of Internet from spreading to your internal network. It more like a moat of a medieval castle that a firewall in a modern building. It serves multiple purposes [1:21]:[[Image:NetworkFirewall.JPG|Figure 1 - A simple firewall diagram|right|thumb]]
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'''Network Firewall''' is now considered as a first line of defense in the form of a barrier against outside attacks, which is installed on computers connect to internet. In general Firewall prevents the dangers of Internet from spreading to your internal network. It more like a moat of a medieval castle that a firewall in a modern building. It serves multiple purposes [1:21]:
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* It restricts people  to entering at a carefully controlled point.
* It restricts people  to entering at a carefully controlled point.
* It prevents attackers from getting close to your other defenses.
* It prevents attackers from getting close to your other defenses.
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* It restricts people to leaving at a carefully controlled point.
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* It restricts people to leaving at a carefully controlled point.[1:21]
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[1:21]
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In practice,a firewall is a collection of  hosts, routers, and other hardware that designed to prevent unauthorized electronic access between two parts of a network. It is also a device or set of devices configured to permit, deny, encrypt, decrypt, or proxy all computer traffic between different security domains based upon a set of rules and other criteria.[3]  
In practice,a firewall is a collection of  hosts, routers, and other hardware that designed to prevent unauthorized electronic access between two parts of a network. It is also a device or set of devices configured to permit, deny, encrypt, decrypt, or proxy all computer traffic between different security domains based upon a set of rules and other criteria.[3]  

Revision as of 02:13, 5 April 2009

Network Firewall is now considered as a first line of defense in the form of a barrier against outside attacks, which is installed on computers connect to internet. In general Firewall prevents the dangers of Internet from spreading to your internal network. It more like a moat of a medieval castle that a firewall in a modern building. It serves multiple purposes [1:21]:
Figure 1 - A simple firewall diagram
  • It restricts people to entering at a carefully controlled point.
  • It prevents attackers from getting close to your other defenses.
  • It restricts people to leaving at a carefully controlled point.[1:21]

In practice,a firewall is a collection of hosts, routers, and other hardware that designed to prevent unauthorized electronic access between two parts of a network. It is also a device or set of devices configured to permit, deny, encrypt, decrypt, or proxy all computer traffic between different security domains based upon a set of rules and other criteria.[3]

Firewalls can be implemented in both hardware and software, or a combination of both. Firewalls are frequently used to prevent unauthorized Internet users from accessing private networks connected to the Internet, especially intranets. All messages entering or leaving the intranet pass through the firewall, which examines each message and blocks those that do not meet the specified security criteria.[3]

Contents

History

What is Firewall

Why Firewall

Benefits of Firewall

Limitations of Firewall

Firewall Types

Simple packet filtering: IP or filtering Firewall

Application Firewalls: proxy servers

Stateful multilayer-inspection Firewalls

Firewall Architectures

Single-Box

Screened host

Screened subnet

Firewall Software

References

  1. Elizabeth D. Zwicky, Simon Cooper, and D. Brent Chapman;Building internet Firewalls, Second Edition; Published by O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. @2000; ISBN:1-56592-871-7, McMaster Thode Library: TK 5105.59.Z85 2000
  2. John R. Vacca, Scott R. Ellis; Firewalls, Jumpstart for Network and Systems Administrators; Elsevier digital press @2005; ISBN: 1-55558-297-4, McMaster Thode Library: TK 5105.59.V32 2005
  3. Firewall, Wikipedia, Accessed on April 3rd 2009 21:35.

See also

External links

Firewalls and Internet Security by Frederic Avolio, Avolio Consulting, Cisco Systems.

Time-stamped Signature

--Fulx 19:05, 4 April 2009 (EDT)

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