04-25-2008 09:50 AM - edited 03-11-2019 05:36 AM
Hi, we want to manage all ASA FW centrally. Please suggest abt any softwrae or tool. Thansk
04-25-2008 12:00 PM
Hi Ray,
Cisco recommends the Cisco Security Manager for all security device management including firewalls. It supports IPS appliances, and security features on routers too, such as VPN, access-lists, and AAA.
Here is a link to the product page:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps6498/index.html
Cisco splits Management and Monitoring. The above software is used for Management.
For Monitoring, Cisco recommends the CS-MARS appliance. Especially for networks where there are multiple security devices. CS-MARS can actually correlate security information (like syslogs and IDS events) into a "big picture". It presents the information as what is going on in the network as a whole, in addition to any particular device.
Here is the product page for CS-MARS:
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/ps6241/index.html
Hope that helps!
-Brian
04-25-2008 12:13 PM
Hi, Is it required any license to use or its free of cost.
04-25-2008 02:19 PM
Here is mine 2c about Cisco CSM.
I used to work for a Managed Security Service
Provider, MSSP, and we managed a lot of
Checkpoint firewalls running on Nokia
appliances
and SecurePlatform, over 1000 firewalls.
We approached Cisco about two years for a
centralized management tools that will be able
to manage hundreds of Cisco Pix/ASA and FWSM
firewalls. The requirement is that it is
easy to use, fast and flexible. In other
words, we want the tool to be as good, if not
better than Checkpoint Provider-1.
Cisco recommended CSM 3.0 beta so I went
ahead and tested the product. It was
absolutely and very slugglish. It did not
come close to Checkpoint Provider-1
centralized management. Cisco then introduced
me to Solsoft, which is a cisco partner.
Solsoft, on the other hand, is a much better
product than Cisco. It can run on both
Linux or Windows whereas Cisco CSM can only
run on Windows platform. Solsoft also has
a lot of limitations as well but if you have
to pick between Solsoft and Cisco CSM, I
definitely pick solsoft over CSM any days.
Even Cisco SEs will admit that to you, off-the
record ofcourse.
04-25-2008 02:48 PM
CSM requires a license.
CSM 3.2 (the latest version that came out this month) is far improved from the CSM 3.0 beta. CSM 3.0 was the first version of CSM and it was built off the remnants of VMS 2.3.
The latest CSM 3.2 is better and faster than the 3.0 and worth another try. I haven't experimented with Solsoft yet.
04-25-2008 04:51 PM
When you say faster and better, does it mean
that the CSM can have 100+ users logging into
the CSM at the same time, and making constant
changes at the same time? I wondered what
the response time will be.
How good is the CSM Java applet works across
the VPN?
Those are the questions that I asked Cisco SEs
about 2 years ago and could not get a
straight answer from them.
04-25-2008 05:29 PM
I can't say for sure on the 100+ users. We're typically at about 10 users here. But considering the robust workflow mode it has, I wouldn't be surprised if it could handle that. It would probably depend on the servers hardware specifications. I have seen deployments of CSM that contain more than 1500 devices. But yeah, can't say for sure on the number of concurrent users.
The CSM Java Applet should have no problem across a VPN tunnel. To be more accurate, it is a java based application that installs on the client side. That CSM client application uses https (or http) protocol to communicate with the CSM server, so it is encrypted and lightweight.
The CSM runs for 90 days without a license, you can grab the software here if you have a CCO account:
The minimum system requirements are 2 GB of ram. You can run it on less also, but for 100+ users concurrently you'd probably need more then 2GB ram.
If you do end up trial running it with 100+ users, let me know what your results are.
-Brian
04-25-2008 07:42 PM
I tested CSM on a 4x "quad-core" Processors with 32GB RAM Dell Server.
This is a very fast box.
I tested version 3.1 last year and it was still slow, especially over
VPN. Others also experienced the same thing.
The problem I see with CSM is scalability. I don't know how familiar
you are with Checkpoint Provider-1 or Juniper NetScreen Security Manager,
NSM, is that these things are very scalable. You can install multiple
Managers & Containers across multiple physical servers and link them
together which allow large environment the ability scale. Therefore,
as you add more devices to manage and more users, you just add more
hardware to scale the infrastructure. For both Checkpoint P-1 and
Netscreen NSM, you need a dedicate server just to handle 100+ users,
in case all of them decide to log into the system at the same time,
and that the server has at least 8GB of RAM for this.
Can CSM do this? Is it possible with CSM? From what I can tell,
CSM is more suited for enterprise environment. CSM does not scale
well in service provider environment.
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