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Check Point Firewall Administration R81.10+

You're reading from   Check Point Firewall Administration R81.10+ A practical guide to Check Point firewall deployment and administration

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801072717
Length 654 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Vladimir Yakovlev Vladimir Yakovlev
Author Profile Icon Vladimir Yakovlev
Vladimir Yakovlev
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Introduction to Check Point, Network Topology, and Firewalls in Your Infrastructure and Lab
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to Check Point Firewalls and Threat Prevention Products FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Common Deployment Scenarios and Network Segmentation 4. Chapter 3: Building a Check Point Lab Environment – Part 1 5. Chapter 4: Building a Check Point Lab Environment – Part 2 6. Part 2: Introduction to Gaia, Check Point Management Interfaces, Objects, and NAT
7. Chapter 5: Gaia OS, the First Time Configuration Wizard, and an Introduction to the Gaia Portal (WebUI) 8. Chapter 6: Check Point Gaia Command-Line Interface; Backup and Recovery Methods; CPUSE 9. Chapter 7: SmartConsole – Familiarization and Navigation 10. Chapter 8: Introduction to Policies, Layers, and Rules 11. Chapter 9: Working with Objects – ICA, SIC, Managed, Static, and Variable Objects 12. Chapter 10: Working with Network Address Translation 13. Part 3: Introduction to Practical Administration for Achieving Common Objectives
14. Chapter 11: Building Your First Policy 15. Chapter 12: Configuring Site-to-Site and Remote Access VPNs 16. Chapter 13: Introduction to Logging and SmartEvent 17. Chapter 14: Working with ClusterXL High Availability 18. Chapter 15: Performing Basic Troubleshooting 19. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix: Licensing

When NAT is not enough

While the majority of cases in simple and small environments can be handled by automatic NAT defined in objects’ properties, with increasing scale and complexity, we will have to resort to manual NAT rules.

Note

The information in this section should be used for reference only since it requires the presence of an access control policy, which we have not yet created.

Let’s look at a few more complex examples of manual NAT implementation that, in addition to the creation of NAT rules, might require a few Gaia configuration changes.

Many-to-less

If your internal networks are larger than Class C, using the Hide behind IP address option described in the previous section might not be feasible. You can still do that by representing your large network as several ranges, each with its own public IP in the NAT properties, but this is a rather tedious process.

An alternative way to handle this issue with greater flexibility is with the...

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