Getting Checkpoint Experience

Getting Checkpoint Experience

am 03.11.2006 15:04:09 von VeeDub

Hi

I am wanting to get some hands on experience with Checkpoint. In the
past I have always purchased equipment (Juniper, Cisco etc) to get this
experience. Can someone tell me what kind of hardware I should be
looking for to start building my own Checkpoint FW. This will only be
used at home so cost-effectiveness has priority over performance but I
do not want to lose functionality i.e. it can do things slowly - as
long as it does them.

Any feedback would be great.

Thanks

Re: Getting Checkpoint Experience

am 10.11.2006 02:06:29 von Jay

You don't need much. Their OS, SecurePlatform (a.k.a. SPLAT) is a rebuild of
RedHat 3. I ran the beta versions of NGX on a 300 MHz P-II (yes, P-II) with
256 MB of RAM. It was an ancient IBM Netfinity server.

Ray

"VeeDub" wrote in message
news:1162562648.963013.112380@m7g2000cwm.googlegroups.com...
> Hi
>
> I am wanting to get some hands on experience with Checkpoint. In the
> past I have always purchased equipment (Juniper, Cisco etc) to get this
> experience. Can someone tell me what kind of hardware I should be
> looking for to start building my own Checkpoint FW. This will only be
> used at home so cost-effectiveness has priority over performance but I
> do not want to lose functionality i.e. it can do things slowly - as
> long as it does them.
>
> Any feedback would be great.
>
> Thanks
>

Re: Getting Checkpoint Experience

am 13.11.2006 12:07:43 von VeeDub

Thanks Ray

I am new to Checkpoint and have never installed or looked at is so am
definitely just starting out. So their software will run on a standard
x86 platform? If that is the case, do you know if it will run as a
virtual machine in VMWare? Finally, what are the benefits to running on
a dedicated appliance such as a Nokia box? I presume higher performance
due to purpose built CPU's etc but anything else?

Thanks
VD


Jay wrote:
> You don't need much. Their OS, SecurePlatform (a.k.a. SPLAT) is a rebuild of
> RedHat 3. I ran the beta versions of NGX on a 300 MHz P-II (yes, P-II) with
> 256 MB of RAM. It was an ancient IBM Netfinity server.
>
> Ray
>
> "VeeDub" wrote in message
> news:1162562648.963013.112380@m7g2000cwm.googlegroups.com...
> > Hi
> >
> > I am wanting to get some hands on experience with Checkpoint. In the
> > past I have always purchased equipment (Juniper, Cisco etc) to get this
> > experience. Can someone tell me what kind of hardware I should be
> > looking for to start building my own Checkpoint FW. This will only be
> > used at home so cost-effectiveness has priority over performance but I
> > do not want to lose functionality i.e. it can do things slowly - as
> > long as it does them.
> >
> > Any feedback would be great.
> >
> > Thanks
> >

Re: Getting Checkpoint Experience

am 24.11.2006 02:00:57 von Robert Mark Bram

I know that SmartCenter R62 will run in Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2.
Nah, the "appliance" moniker is way overused. Nokia provides a pre-hardened
operating system based on FreeBSD from years ago called IPSO, but nowadays
that's probably the only resemblance to FreeBSD because they have modified
it so much. One thing I like about the Nokia boxes is that you can have two
complete versions of the OS installed. You can install an upgrade and do a
"test reboot" into it. If you don't confirm that you want to keep it within
five minutes, it automatically reboots back into the previous OS version. It
makes remote upgrades much less worrisome.

Check Point now has their SecurePlatform operating system (a.ka."SPLAT")
based on RedHat v3 and it comes with the product. If you need routing
protocols like OSPF on it, you have to go with the extra cost version called
SecurePlatform Pro. Nokia boxes come with just about all routing protocols
except BGP as standard. BGP requires an extra cost license.

If you're using SPLAT, they have a hardware compatibility matrix on their
web site. Check Point also runs on Solaris and Windows, although for the
life of me I cannot figure out why anyone would want to do either.

Ray

"VeeDub" wrote in message
news:1163416063.580506.77150@k70g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
> Thanks Ray
>
> I am new to Checkpoint and have never installed or looked at is so am
> definitely just starting out. So their software will run on a standard
> x86 platform? If that is the case, do you know if it will run as a
> virtual machine in VMWare? Finally, what are the benefits to running on
> a dedicated appliance such as a Nokia box? I presume higher performance
> due to purpose built CPU's etc but anything else?
>
> Thanks
> VD
>
>
> Jay wrote:
>> You don't need much. Their OS, SecurePlatform (a.k.a. SPLAT) is a rebuild
>> of
>> RedHat 3. I ran the beta versions of NGX on a 300 MHz P-II (yes, P-II)
>> with
>> 256 MB of RAM. It was an ancient IBM Netfinity server.
>>
>> Ray
>>
>> "VeeDub" wrote in message
>> news:1162562648.963013.112380@m7g2000cwm.googlegroups.com...
>> > Hi
>> >
>> > I am wanting to get some hands on experience with Checkpoint. In the
>> > past I have always purchased equipment (Juniper, Cisco etc) to get this
>> > experience. Can someone tell me what kind of hardware I should be
>> > looking for to start building my own Checkpoint FW. This will only be
>> > used at home so cost-effectiveness has priority over performance but I
>> > do not want to lose functionality i.e. it can do things slowly - as
>> > long as it does them.
>> >
>> > Any feedback would be great.
>> >
>> > Thanks
>> >
>