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OPNsense Beginner to Professional

OPNsense Beginner to Professional

By : Camargo
4.3 (8)
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OPNsense Beginner to Professional

OPNsense Beginner to Professional

4.3 (8)
By: Camargo

Overview of this book

OPNsense is one of the most powerful open source firewalls and routing platforms available. With OPNsense, you can now protect networks using features that were only previously available to closed source commercial firewalls. This book is a practical guide to building a comprehensive network defense strategy using OPNsense. You’ll start with the basics, understanding how to install, configure, and protect network resources using native features and additional OPNsense plugins. Next, you’ll explore real-world examples to gain in-depth knowledge of firewalls and network defense. You’ll then focus on boosting your network defense, preventing cyber threats, and improving your knowledge of firewalling using this open source security platform. By the end of this OPNsense book, you’ll be able to install, configure, and manage the OPNsense firewall by making the most of its features.
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
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1
Section 1: Initial Configuration
6
Section 2: Securing the Network
13
Section 3: Going beyond the Firewall

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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