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OPNsense Beginner to Professional

You're reading from   OPNsense Beginner to Professional Protect networks and build next-generation firewalls easily with OPNsense

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801816878
Length 464 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Julio Cesar Bueno de Camargo Julio Cesar Bueno de Camargo
Author Profile Icon Julio Cesar Bueno de Camargo
Julio Cesar Bueno de Camargo
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Table of Contents (25) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Initial Configuration
2. Chapter 1: An OPNsense Overview FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Installing OPNsense 4. Chapter 3: Configuring an OPNsense Network 5. Chapter 4: System Configuration 6. Section 2: Securing the Network
7. Chapter 5: Firewall 8. Chapter 6: Network Address Translation (NAT) 9. Chapter 7: Traffic Shaping 10. Chapter 8: Virtual Private Networking 11. Chapter 9: Multi-WAN – Failover and Load Balancing 12. Chapter 10: Reporting 13. Section 3: Going beyond the Firewall
14. Chapter 11: Deploying DHCP in OPNsense 15. Chapter 12: DNS Services 16. Chapter 13: Web Proxy 17. Chapter 14: Captive Portal 18. Chapter 15: Network Intrusion (Detection and Prevention) Systems 19. Chapter 16: Next-Generation Firewall with Zenarmor 20. Chapter 17: Firewall High Availability 21. Chapter 18: Website Protection with OPNsense 22. Chapter 19: Command-Line Interface 23. Chapter 20: API – Application Programming Interface 24. Other Books You May Enjoy

Outbound NAT

Back to our examples, as we discussed at the beginning of this chapter, let's use the example of a small company with 10 computers and just a single public IP address in its WAN connection. Moving on in this scenario, we have the goal to connect all those computers to the internet just using firewall capabilities. How do we achieve that? By creating an outbound NAT! Let's see how things work. The following is an example topology of outbound NAT traffic:

Figure 6.5 – Outbound NAT example

Figure 6.5 – Outbound NAT example

As we can see in the preceding figure, three clients are each accessing a website. Let's pick the host 192.168.10.11: it is accessing the https://cloudfence.eu website, but to the CloudFence web server, the source IP address is the public IP of OPNsense firewall 200.200.200.1 with source port 10200. So what is happening here? The outbound NAT rule is translating from the internal source IP to a public IP address, so from a TCP perspective...

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