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What is a firewall?
A firewall is an information technology (IT) security device which is configured to permit, deny or proxy data connections set and configured by the organization's security policy. Firewalls can either be hardware and/or software based.
A firewall's basic task is to control traffic between computer networks with different zones of trust. Typical examples are the Internet which is a zone with no trust and an internal network which is (and should be) a zone with high trust. The ultimate goal is to provide controlled interfaces between zones of differing trust levels through the enforcement of a security policy and connectivity model. A zone with an intermediate trust level, situated between the Internet and a trusted internal network, is often referred to as a "perimeter network" or Demilitarized zone (DMZ).
A firewall's function is analogous to firewalls in building construction.
Proper configuration of firewalls demands skill from the firewall administrator. It requires considerable understanding of network protocols and of computer security. Small mistakes can render a firewall worthless as a security tool. Standard Security practices dictate a "default-deny" firewall ruleset.
At LevelSecurity, we provide a broad overview and comparison of available firewall technologies and the TCP/IP model.
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Firewall technology emerged in the late
1980s when the Internet was a fairly new technology in terms of its
global use and connectivity. The original idea was formed in
response to a number of major internet security breaches, which
occurred in the late 1980s. In 1988 an employee at the NASA Ames
Research Center in California sent a memo by email to his colleagues
that read,
“ We are currently under attack from an Internet VIRUS! It has hit
Berkeley, UC San Diego, Lawrence Livermore, Stanford, and NASA Ames.
”
The Morris Worm spread itself through multiple vulnerabilities in
the machines of the time. Although it was not malicious in intent,
the Morris Worm was the first large scale attack on Internet
security; the online community was neither expecting an attack nor
prepared to deal with one.
First generation - packet filters
The first paper published on firewall technology was in 1988, when
Dodong Sean James and Elohra from Digital Equipment Corporation
(DEC) developed filter systems known as packet filter firewalls.
This fairly basic system was the first generation of what would
become a highly evolved and technical internet security feature. At
AT&T Bill Cheswick and Steve Bellovin were continuing their research
in packet filtering and developed a working model for their own
company based upon their original first generation architecture.
Packet filters act by inspecting the "packets" which represent the
basic unit of data transfer between computers on the Internet. If a
packet matches the packet filter's set of rules, the packet filter
will drop (silently discard) the packet, or reject it (discard it,
and send "error responses" to the source).
This type of packet filtering pays no attention to whether a packet
is part of an existing stream of traffic (it stores no information
on connection "state"). Instead, it filters each packet based only
on information contained in the packet itself (most commonly using a
combination of the packet's source and destination address, its
protocol, and, for TCP and UDP traffic, which comprises most
internet communication, the port number).
Because TCP and UDP traffic by convention uses well known ports for
particular types of traffic, a "stateless" packet filter can
distinguish between, and thus control, those types of traffic (such
as web browsing, remote printing, email transmission, file
transfer), unless the machines on each side of the packet filter are
both using the same non-standard ports.
Second generation - "stateful" filters
From 1980-1990 three colleagues from AT&T Bell Laboratories, Dave
Presetto, Howard Trickey, and Kshitij Nigam developed the second
generation of firewalls, calling them circuit level firewalls.
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This technology is generally referred to as a 'stateful firewall' as
it maintains records of all connections passing through the
firewall, and is able to determine whether a packet is the start of
a new connection, or part of an existing connection. Though there's
still a set of static rules in such a firewall, the state of a
connection can in itself be one of the criteria which trigger
specific rules.
This type of firewall can help prevent attacks which exploit
existing connections, or certain Denial-of-service attacks,
including the SYN flood which sends improper sequences of packets to
consume resources on systems behind a firewall..
Third generation - application layer
Publications by Gene Spafford of Purdue University, Bill Cheswick at
AT&T Laboratories and Marcus Ranum described a third generation
firewall known as application layer firewall, also known as proxy
based firewalls. Marcus Ranum's work on the technology spearheaded
the creation of the first commercial product. The product was
released by DEC who named it the SEAL product. DEC’s first major
sale was on June 13, 1991 to a chemical company based on the East
Coast of the USA.
The key benefit of application layer filtering is that it can
"understand" certain applications and protocols (such as File
Transfer Protocol, DNS or web browsing), and can detect whether an
unwanted protocol is being sneaked through on a non-standard port,
or whether a protocol is being abused in a known harmful way.
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This type of filtering can be carried out by proxy servers, but if
the filtering is done by a standalone firewall appliance, or in a
device for traffic shaping, the technology is likely to be referred
to as deep packet inspection.
Subsequent developments
In 1992, Bob Braden and Annette DeSchon at the University of
Southern California (USC) were developing their own fourth
generation packet filter firewall system. The product known as
"Visas" was the first system to have a visual integration interface
with colours and icons, which could be easily implemented to and
accessed on a computer operating system such as Microsoft's Windows
or Apple's MacOS. In 1994 an Israeli company called Check Point
Software Technologies built this into readily available software
known as FireWall-1.
A second generation of proxy firewalls was based on Kernel Proxy
technology. This design is constantly evolving but its basic
features and codes are currently in widespread use in both
commercial and domestic computer systems. Cisco, one of the largest
internet security companies in the world released their PIX product
to the public in 1997.
Some modern firewalls leverage their existing deep packet inspection
engine by sharing this functionality with an Intrusion-prevention
system (IPS).
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