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CMU-CS-00-173
Computer Science Department
School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University
CMU-CS-00-173
Building Firewalls with Intelligent Network Interface Cards
David Friedman, David Nagle
May 2001
CMU-CS-00-173.ps
CMU-CS-00-173.pdf
Keywords: Firewalls, security, network interface cards, distributed
systems
The primary method for protecting networks today is to use a firewall: a
boundary separating the protected network from the untrusted Internet.
However, these firewalls offer no protection from internal attacks, scale
poorly due to limited firewall processing capacity, and do not support mobile
computing. Distributing a firewall to each network host avoids many of these
problems, but weakens the security guarantees of the network since it places
the firewall under the control of the host OS. Leveraging the increasing
capability of embedded-VLSI, including network-specific processors, we
propose a Network Interface Card (NIC) based distributed firewall.
Supporting the same (and more) functions as a centralized firewall, NIC-based
firewalls provide significant benefits including: scalability, easier client
customization, sharing application/OS state to enable application-level
filtering, and the ability to block misbehaving hosts at the source, the
host itself. We describe the architecture of a Network Interface Card-based
distributed firewall and our implementation, which uses an i960-based NIC
and IPsec for management and policy distribution. The firewall currently
supports basic packet filtering and some application policies as well as
secure policy distribution.
19 pages
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