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Runing Sophos UTM virtualized or on dedicated hardware?

Hi!
I have a computer with a Core I7 2600K, 32GB ram, 4 Intel nics, and I'm planning to run Sophos UTM on this as my primary firewall (home use with some internal and some public servers behind).

I think it is quite a waste to use the hardware as a firewall only, I don't think Sophos need an I7 with 32GB ram, or am I wrong?

I have a little thought to run ESXI on the machine to have some more vm:s running on it in parallell with Sophos UTM.

I think the hardware can handle a one or two vm:s alongside a Sophos install..?

 

My biggest concern are the security, how secure is it to run the firewall virtualized? For some reason my heart screams a little when I'm thinking to run it virtualized, because
a dedicated approach should be more secure, because you don't expose a virtualization platform to the net as you do with a virtualized approach.

But is it common that hackers find holes on the virtualization platform and can gain access to the internal lans? How safe are virtualization platforms nowadays?

I don't think it is an uncommon approach on companies to run it virtualized, but maybe I'm wrong. This is for personal use in a home environment, but I still want secure networks.

I may run it virtualized if you say that it is safe.. :P

 

For your information: I have a 250/100Mbps fiber connection to my house.

 

Thanks in advance!



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  • widdde said:

    Hi!
    I have a computer with a Core I7 2600K, 32GB ram, 4 Intel nics, and I'm planning to run Sophos UTM on this as my primary firewall (home use with some internal and some public servers behind).

    I think it is quite a waste to use the hardware as a firewall only, I don't think Sophos need an I7 with 32GB ram, or am I wrong?

    I have a little thought to run ESXI on the machine to have some more vm:s running on it in parallell with Sophos UTM.

    I think the hardware can handle a one or two vm:s alongside a Sophos install..?

    My biggest concern are the security, how secure is it to run the firewall virtualized? For some reason my heart screams a little when I'm thinking to run it virtualized, because
    a dedicated approach should be more secure, because you don't expose a virtualization platform to the net as you do with a virtualized approach.

    But is it common that hackers find holes on the virtualization platform and can gain access to the internal lans? How safe are virtualization platforms nowadays?

    I don't think it is an uncommon approach on companies to run it virtualized, but maybe I'm wrong. This is for personal use in a home environment, but I still want secure networks.

    I may run it virtualized if you say that it is safe.. :P

    For your information: I have a 250/100Mbps fiber connection to my house.

    Thanks in advance! 

    Widde,

    You can run Sophos SG UTM and XG Firewall virtualized, but in your situation. To do this, you would have to allow the unfiltered traffic onto your network in order to filter it in a virtualized environment.  This is complicated and expensive for most home environments as it requires managed switches for VLANs and robust servers for virtualization.

    For most home settings, all you need to do is deploy the UTM/Firewall on a small firewall appliance in between your fiber gateway and your internal network.  The device required is very simple computer with two or more ethernet ports.  You can purchase a firewall computer with RAM and SSD installed, or you can purchase a barebones systems and add your own RAM/storage.  In most cases, you don't need a more than 8GBs of RAM or 64GB of storage.  If you have an old computer laying around, you can use that too, but be warned that UTM and XG installers wipe the hard drive during installation.

    On your fiber connection, I would recommend a Protectli Vault.  It includes multiple ports for organizing your LAN, virtualization, Wi-Fi, and other networks.  Each port will become an interface.  Each interface can have a default LAN on which you can add layers of VLANs.  In the default Gateway mode, your UTM will be the network router, and through it, you can create, manage, and combine all the interfaces, LANs, or VLANs.  You can do a lot of other things too.  If you prefer to use your existing router as the network manager, you can set the UTM in a Bridge mode.

    I moved from the Sophos SG UTM to the Sophos XG Firewall.  It was easy because they use the same appliances.  My XG Firewall is in a ZBOX CI325 Nano with 4GB RAM and a 32GB SSD connected to an Arris SurfBoard SB6190 cable modem to a on a 350Mbps cable connection.  The Zbox only has two ports WAN and LAN.  The only thing on the LAN is an Apple Time Machine in bridge mode.  This gives me two networks, the default LAN for my internal wired/wireless/backup network and Guest Wi-Fi on a separate VLAN.

  • Hi David and thanks for your response!

    Well, I'm not an ordinary home user, I already have 2x 24 ports managed switches and 4 x 8 ports managed switches.

    I currently run Sophos UTM on hardware where I can't get full speed on my 250/100 Mbps connection with IPS enabled.

    The speed drops about 100Mbps to 150Mbps, this is because snort is single threaded and therefor I planned to beef upp
    the cpu to a Core I7 (but run it in a virtualized environment). 

    I'm already running a couple of vlans in my home and will continue to do this after the change to other hardware.

     

    From my fiber connection I will connect ESXI on a dedicated network card that only the firewall will use and all other network will reside on
    another network card, the lan side, in the virtualized firewall.

    My concern is if ESXI will be a security issue because the firewall isn't the first physical box, but if ESXI doesn't listen on the interface where I plug internet in

    maybe it is a secure solution?

  • widdde said:

    Hi David and thanks for your response!

    Well, I'm not an ordinary home user, I already have 2x 24 ports managed switches and 4 x 8 ports managed switches.

    I currently run Sophos UTM on hardware where I can't get full speed on my 250/100 Mbps connection with IPS enabled.

    The speed drops about 100Mbps to 150Mbps, this is because snort is single threaded and therefor I planned to beef upp
    the cpu to a Core I7 (but run it in a virtualized environment). 

    I'm already running a couple of vlans in my home and will continue to do this after the change to other hardware.

    From my fiber connection I will connect ESXI on a dedicated network card that only the firewall will use and all other network will reside on
    another network card, the lan side, in the virtualized firewall.

    My concern is if ESXI will be a security issue because the firewall isn't the first physical box, but if ESXI doesn't listen on the interface where I plug internet in

    maybe it is a secure solution?

    Connecting the fiber gateway directly to your virtualization is super risky.  You're putting your entire virtualization setup at risk.  You really should put the UTM in its own box between your internet gateway and the network.

    The virtualization can also become a bottleneck and slow down the internet data flowing through it.  You will be tasking your CPU to do network control, IPS, and data filtering on top of the virtualization and the other OS's running in that virtualization.

    What's the point of moving to an I7 only to use a fraction of its potential in virtualization?

    Why run snort if your UTM does IPS?

    How are you receiving so much data to the internet that 100Mbps bandwidth is not enough?  What kind of data are you constantly receiving to your home that you need a full 250Mbps download?  I receive large video and database files from time to time.  That's the only reason I have 350Mbps; otherwise, 100Mbps would be more than enough.

     

  • My SOHO runs like this. Fibre modem plugs directly into Cisco switch on vlan X

    ESXI plugs into switch using a trunk port with. I actually have the ESXI server port channel (2 ports) and incoming/outgoing (WAN/LAN's) traffic flows via this ether-channel.

    Never had an issue and not really a security issue either.

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  • My SOHO runs like this. Fibre modem plugs directly into Cisco switch on vlan X

    ESXI plugs into switch using a trunk port with. I actually have the ESXI server port channel (2 ports) and incoming/outgoing (WAN/LAN's) traffic flows via this ether-channel.

    Never had an issue and not really a security issue either.

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