New Netgate Appliance for IPS/IDS
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@blaytrail at a minimum you want the 2100 and an mSATA drive - you will drastically shorten the lifespan of your 1100 by writing all those logs to the eMMC.
For the hardware that we have available to purchase at the moment your next option after that is the 6100. I'm afraid we do not presently have any hardware between the 2100 and the 6100 available. Both the 3100 and 5100 are end of sale due to long-term issues with hardware availablity.
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Thanks for the quick reply. It looks like the 2100 is currently out of stock. :)
The 6100 should be fine with the optional 128 GB NVMe M.2 SSD.
Can you connect an external hard drive to this device for storing the logs?
Also, can you get support if you build your own PC and installed pfSense or does have to be a Netgate device?
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@blaytrail The USB ports are not set up to support external storage.
You can configure pf, however, to write logs to a rSysLog server.As for supporting software on third-party hardware that is available presently but after, I believe, the end of the 2022 calendar year you will have to be running pfSense Plus in order to get commercial support.
Support plans can be found at https://netgate.com/support
Migration to pfSense Plus can be found at https://www.netgate.com/blog/migrate-from-pfsense-ce-software-to-netgate-pfsense-plus-software -
Is the Netgate 2100 Max still on backorder?
Thanks.
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@blaytrail said in New Netgate Appliance for IPS/IDS:
Is the Netgate 2100 Max still on backorder?
Thanks.
Please note the SG-2100 shares the same CPU as the SG-1100, and it is vastly underpowered for snort/suricata at > 100mbps - and even there you have to trim down rules quite aggressively.
My advise would be: Get a SG-6100 MAX (MAX needed for the massive logs created by IDS/IPS)
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Thanks. The SG-6100 is very expensive. Do you have any other devices that are cheaper that can run Suricata at this time?
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@blaytrail said in New Netgate Appliance for IPS/IDS:
Thanks. The SG-6100 is very expensive. Do you have any other devices that are cheaper that can run Suricata at this time?
Well in my opinion (I’m not from netgate) no.. well not official appliances anyway. The SG-3100 has power to cope at a reasonable bandwidth, but the CPU is 32bit only, and already package support is mixed. It’s also end of sale for quite a while, so stay away from that one.
If you can find a SG-5100 left over somewhere, that would do the trick.Otherwise you are looking at 3rd party hardware, and pfSense CE - and optionally a subscription for pfSense+
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We can now (since earlier today) point you at the new 4100:
https://www.netgate.com/pfsense-plus-software/how-to-buy#4100Steve
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@stephenw10 said in New Netgate Appliance for IPS/IDS:
We can now (since earlier today) point you at the new 4100:
https://www.netgate.com/pfsense-plus-software/how-to-buy#4100Steve
Whoaa, that’s a very nice/cool little midtier firewall. I would probably have preferred it was ARM (power consumption and performance), but this is not bad at all :-)
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Thanks for the update. This is exactly what I needed.
I was told with the new version of pfSense 2.6 .0 you can run the software on any device. Is that true? You can run Netgate pfsense 2.6.0 on any device.More info here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jZpDRcWjIok
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You have always been able to run CE (2.6) on any x86 device assuming supported hardware. Now you can upgrade to pfSense Plus (22.01) on that hardware.
Steve
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@blaytrail I'm late to the thread, but my answer would be "it depends." We have several 2100s and 3100s in service at clients all running Suricata or in a couple cases Snort, with no issues. As noted the 2100 is similar to the 1100 but has dedicated interfaces.
Download bandwidth is a factor as higher speeds will use more CPU power. If you look at the product comparison page it has numbers for each for 10000 firewall rules, VPN, etc., so you can kind of guess at a high CPU load. To some degree higher CPU usage is true even without IDS, but I want to say from memory turning off Suricata drops CPU usage by about half. The 330ish Mbps I get from my home cable (300/10, with Snort) doesn't max out my 2100's CPU but it is rather high and I don't think it would get to 500.
Limiting the rulesets used has an effect of course...no need to look for web server exploits if you have no open ports or no web server. Also, put Suricata on LAN instead of WAN so it isn't scanning packets that will immediately be dropped anyway. Note most web traffic nowadays is encrypted, so nothing to scan there. So, maybe Suricata is not as useful in a home situation...at my home there are days it doesn't even log an alert.
Given the recent thread about calculating eMMC life, I checked a few and two 3100s in service since Oct/Nov 2017 were at 40% and 50% (and, the latter does not have Suricata). So I'm personally not overly worried about logging, as long as it isn't logging a lot of alerts like our data center does. https://www.netgate.com/supported-pfsense-plus-packages lists three heavy-logging packages as "requires SDD" or for others like Snort/Suricata "SSD/HDD is strongly recommended" but I think it depends on how much writing is being done. Also, one can enable a RAM disk for logs (which the two 3100s above weren't using for the last 4.3 years).
If you are thinking about upgrading anyway, you could just try it out and see, and upgrade if necessary.
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@steveits said in New Netgate Appliance for IPS/IDS:
Given the recent thread about calculating eMMC life, I checked a few and two 3100s in service since Oct/Nov 2017 were at 40% and 50% (and, the latter does not have Suricata). So I'm personally not overly worried about logging, as long as it isn't logging a lot of alerts like our data center does. https://www.netgate.com/supported-pfsense-plus-packages lists three heavy-logging packages as "requires SDD" or for others like Snort/Suricata "SSD/HDD is strongly recommended" but I think it depends on how much writing is being done. Also, one can enable a RAM disk for logs (which the two 3100s above weren't using for the last 4.3 years).
That is really interesting information as Netgate has not confirmed the actual write endurance of the built-in eMMC’s.
So when I made my calculations for the write endurance thread I used a guestimated endurance of about 12Tb for the small 8Gb eMMC and 25Tb for the 16Gb ones. Those are “common” averages for small eMMCs I could find online.Could you perhaps have a look at how much writing is being done on the 3100’s that had a 50% wear at this point? What is the average write rate on them since the last boot? Use the command “iostat -x” and paste the numbers here :-)
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Thanks for all the information. I'm starting to lean towards getting a PC with two nic's and installing pfsense.
I agree, using a SSD/HDD with Snort/HDD will extend the life of the drive.
Can I get pfsense as an ISO to install on a server or VM?
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@blaytrail said in New Netgate Appliance for IPS/IDS:
Can I get pfsense as an ISO to install on a server or VM?
Yes: https://nyifiles.netgate.com/mirror/downloads/pfSense-CE-2.6.0-RELEASE-amd64.iso.gz
Steve
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Thanks Steve. I just downloaded the ISO.
If I'm not mistaken, the new version of pfsense is exactly the same as what is placed on the Netgate appliances.
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@keyser said in New Netgate Appliance for IPS/IDS:
look at how much writing is being done on the 3100’s that had a 50% wear
extended device statistics device r/s w/s kr/s kw/s ms/r ms/w ms/o ms/t qlen %b flash/sp 0 0 0.0 0.0 7 0 0 7 0 0 mmcsd0 2 1 50.6 13.0 1 3 0 1 0 0 mmcsd0bo 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 mmcsd0bo 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0
That one does have bandwidthd running on it. The 50% is presumably rounded somehow but not sure which direction.
@blaytrail said in New Netgate Appliance for IPS/IDS:
the new version of pfsense is exactly the same as what is placed on the Netgate appliances
No, Netgate appliances have pfSense Plus. 2.6 is the open source/CE version. You can however upgrade to Plus if desired. Currently they are very similar.
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@steveits said in New Netgate Appliance for IPS/IDS:
extended device statistics
device r/s w/s kr/s kw/s ms/r ms/w ms/o ms/t qlen %b
flash/sp 0 0 0.0 0.0 7 0 0 7 0 0
mmcsd0 2 1 50.6 13.0 1 3 0 1 0 0
mmcsd0bo 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0
mmcsd0bo 0 0 0.0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0That one does have bandwidthd running on it. The 50% is presumably rounded somehow but not sure which direction.
Thank you Steve - That's really interesting information. This is obviously math with some fairly heavy handed assumptions, but here it goes (Based on your provided information):
Let's say the 13 KB writes/s average since last reboot is also the average across the devices lifetime. You put it into service in Oct. 2017 which is around 1600 days ago.
So 13KB/s * 60sec * 60min * 24hours * 1600days= about 1.8TB written.
Those 1.8TB caused 50% wear, which in effect means about a 4TB write endurance on the eMMC. Half of what I originally predicted and estimated my own devices lifetime from.
I know the that your devices very small sustained writes is the worst because of how SSDs works inside, so likely it has caused a much higher write amplification than a sustained 500KB/s would.But still - it's very obvious that eMMC's are dangerous when packages does a lot of logging/writing or temporary storage. Luckily I became aware of an issue in pfBlockerNG that caused it to do sustained writes of about 350KB/s - which in effect would have killed my SG-2100 in about 6 months with the math above, or about a year with my guesstimated 11TB write endurance.
Needless to say I have upgraded my SG-2100 and 6100 with a SSD now to avoid prematurely killing them :-)
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The 1100 is where you should really avoid heavy drive writes because it can only boot from eMMC.
On everything else you can install an SSD and recover should you have a drive failure.
The actual number of drive failures we see is far lower than you might expect from calculations like that though. Actual writes to the flash are significantly lower than the write data to the drive it would seem.
Steve
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@stephenw10 said in New Netgate Appliance for IPS/IDS:
The 1100 is where you should really avoid heavy drive writes because it can only boot from eMMC.
On everything else you can install an SSD and recover should you have a drive failure.
The actual number of drive failures we see is far lower than you might expect from calculations like that though. Actual writes to the flash are significantly lower than the write data to the drive it would seem.
Steve
That's good to know - I was wondering if one could expect the box to continue to work if the eMMC was dead. That does make it less catastrophic (unless you are a SG-1100 owner)