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Mastering Palo Alto Networks

You're reading from   Mastering Palo Alto Networks Build, configure, and deploy network solutions for your infrastructure using features of PAN-OS

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803241418
Length 636 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Concepts
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Author (1):
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Tom Piens Aka 'Reaper' Tom Piens Aka 'Reaper'
Author Profile Icon Tom Piens Aka 'Reaper'
Tom Piens Aka 'Reaper'
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Understanding the Core Technologies 2. Setting Up a New Device FREE CHAPTER 3. Building Strong Policies 4. Taking Control of Sessions 5. Services and Operational Modes 6. Identifying Users and Controlling Access 7. Managing Firewalls through Panorama 8. Upgrading Firewalls and Panorama 9. Logging and Reporting 10. Virtual Private Networks 11. Advanced Protection 12. Troubleshooting Common Session Issues 13. A Deep Dive into Troubleshooting 14. Cloud-Based Firewall Deployment 15. Supporting Tools 16. Other Books You May Enjoy
17. Index

Enabling virtual systems

Enabling virtual systems (VSYS) on a firewall makes it into a multi-tenant system. Each VSYS represents a virtual firewall instance that can operate independently while sharing the resources available on the host system. The host system still retains control over all networking functions (interfaces and their configurations, routing tables, IPSec and GRE tunnels, DHCP, DNS proxy, and so on) and the management configuration. Each VSYS can be assigned its own (sub) interfaces and routing can either be taken care of at the system level or by creating virtual routers and assigning them to each VSYSes.

Important note

By default, each firewall creates its objects in vsys1. This is the native VSYS even for devices that do not support multi-VSYS. Objects created in vsys1 or any other VSYS will not be visible to other VSYSes unless their location is set as shared.

Only the larger physical platforms (PA-3220 and up at the time of writing) support...

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