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Firewall

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A '''firewall''' is a software application that runs on a Freebsd system acting as a gateway to the public internet that examines the traffic wanting to pass through it making decisions about whether to allow, deny, log, NAT, and/or otherwise fiddle with the traffic on a packet-by-packet basis by consulting a ruleset it's been programmed with.
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A '''firewall''' is a software application that runs on a Freebsd system acting as a gateway to the public internet that examines the traffic wanting to pass through it making decisions about whether to allow, deny, log, NAT, and/or otherwise fiddle with the traffic on a packet-by-packet basis by consulting a ruleset it's been programmed with.
  
 
The main purpose of firewalls is to protect an internal network from malicious traffic inbound from public networks. They can monitor and/or control both inbound and outbound traffic. In particular, in work related environments it can be useful to deny outbound traffic on ports used for non-work-related peer-to-peer file-sharing networks; and to deny and log outbound traffic that is characteristic of malware-related activity.
 
The main purpose of firewalls is to protect an internal network from malicious traffic inbound from public networks. They can monitor and/or control both inbound and outbound traffic. In particular, in work related environments it can be useful to deny outbound traffic on ports used for non-work-related peer-to-peer file-sharing networks; and to deny and log outbound traffic that is characteristic of malware-related activity.
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[[Category:Securing FreeBSD]]
 
[[Category:Securing FreeBSD]]
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[[Category: FreeBSD Terminology]]

Revision as of 14:53, 13 August 2012

A firewall is a software application that runs on a Freebsd system acting as a gateway to the public internet that examines the traffic wanting to pass through it making decisions about whether to allow, deny, log, NAT, and/or otherwise fiddle with the traffic on a packet-by-packet basis by consulting a ruleset it's been programmed with.

The main purpose of firewalls is to protect an internal network from malicious traffic inbound from public networks. They can monitor and/or control both inbound and outbound traffic. In particular, in work related environments it can be useful to deny outbound traffic on ports used for non-work-related peer-to-peer file-sharing networks; and to deny and log outbound traffic that is characteristic of malware-related activity.

FreeBSD has three firewall soultions available, they are; [ipfw] (FreeBSD-maintained), [pf] (OpenBSD-originated, ported to FreeBSD), and [ipf] (OS-agnostic, ipfilter ported to FreeBSD).

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