Not entirely true - if you use one of the firewall distro's. You
can
have a firewall up in 4 mins, ok then 14. Look at e-smith, fli4l,
smoothwall
etc.
Steve.
Linux Assuming you want to put a machine between you and the
net or
move to the OS, Linux offers a cheap (as in free) way to setup a
firewall. It
is the most complex of solutions since a default linux install is not
particularly secure. Some knowledge of the OS and a lot of reading to
work
out what's what is required to create a suitable firewall machine
although
newer distributions have tried to create an easier interface to do this.
Not recommended unless you know the OS or have a patient friend to teach
one
or a trustworthy one to go in and set up for you. You would also need to
move the DUN connection to Linux and install IP Masquearding and Port
Forwarding to perform an ICS type sharing of the connection. It is
suitable
as a firewall for a network. Could be configured from the host PC or
through
a suitably secured telnet SSH1/2 shell to the host from a
client.
A hardware firewall is obviously the better bet in more
secure environments, but IME the NIS and previous AtGuard have been more
thna
enough for my needs. Zone Alarm gets many recommendations but my
personal
experience leads me to not concur with this recommendation. Out of those
I
have used and tried, NIS is my winner. There were some others I tried
briefly
but they either failed to install or had run time problems so I have
ignored
them here.
HTH
Mark.
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