05-05-2023 06:48 AM
Does anyone know if it would be possible to enter an IP somewhere in FMC and see how it would react to it? I am wondering if it is possible to simulate a user accessing an IP address or address range. I have been given a list of IPs from a vendor that we are supposed to whitelist. However, if we already allow access I don't want to make an access policy rule to allow them. Specifically I would like to enter an address like 8.8.8.8 and see if firepower would block or allow that address and then see why it was blocked or not.
Solved! Go to Solution.
05-05-2023 06:55 AM - edited 05-05-2023 06:56 AM
@ryders1 you can run packet-tracer to simulate the traffic flow to the destination, this will tell you if it is allowed or blocked.
05-05-2023 06:57 AM
Hi
You can use Packet Tracer for that.
05-05-2023 07:20 AM
Packet-tracer you can use but if packet is drop in Snort you need more than packet-tracer.
05-05-2023 08:02 AM
First, be familiar enough with your firewall policy to be able to answer this question affirmatively for most use cases.
Second, packet-tracer can indeed confirm the rule set behavior. While it might not pick up latent issues where Snort (Security Intelligence or black lists) would drop the packets, if your vendor's required addresses are on one of those naughty lists you have a bigger problem than your firewall.
05-05-2023 06:55 AM - edited 05-05-2023 06:56 AM
@ryders1 you can run packet-tracer to simulate the traffic flow to the destination, this will tell you if it is allowed or blocked.
05-05-2023 06:57 AM
Hi
You can use Packet Tracer for that.
05-05-2023 07:20 AM
Packet-tracer you can use but if packet is drop in Snort you need more than packet-tracer.
05-05-2023 08:02 AM
First, be familiar enough with your firewall policy to be able to answer this question affirmatively for most use cases.
Second, packet-tracer can indeed confirm the rule set behavior. While it might not pick up latent issues where Snort (Security Intelligence or black lists) would drop the packets, if your vendor's required addresses are on one of those naughty lists you have a bigger problem than your firewall.
05-05-2023 10:55 AM
Thanks everyone. That is what I was looking for.
Discover and save your favorite ideas. Come back to expert answers, step-by-step guides, recent topics, and more.
New here? Get started with these tips. How to use Community New member guide