Jerry Westrick wrote:
On Sunday 26 June 2005 00:01, Richard Bos wrote:
Op zaterdag 25 juni 2005 12:48, schreef Anders Norrbring:
Is there a side-by-side comparison available somewhere?
I found this (http://www.tomsnetworking.com/Reviews-178-ProdID-SMOOTHWALL-5.php): Since I recently reviewed ClarkConnect-another free Open Source firewall-I thought I'd offer a few points of comparison. The biggest difference between the two is that Smoothwall is designed to be a dedicated firewall only, while ClarkConnect can be a firewall, a server, or both. On the other hand, both distros are alike in that they are designed to be administered from a web based configuration utility.
But I think Smoothwall's web interface is a little better laid out and easier to navigate than ClarkConnect's. And I found Smoothwall's online help system to be more helpful and complete than Clarkconnect's method of putting general descriptions alongside configuration options. In the end, both distros are reliable and will get the job done, while at the same time being easy for almost anyone to get up and running.
-- Richard Bos Without a home the journey is endless
Okay, and don't forget FloppyFW, in combination with fwbuilder on a another machine it's great.
Jerry
That's what I started out with, then I had a problem getting some ports through and I thought I was doing everything right. No reply from the floppFW author to my email, so I googled around, found and switched to BBIagent (Linux-2.4.30 based) also on a floppy which worked first time and needed only some ticks in boxes, IP addresses and ports - they don't come any simpler. Perhaps fwbuilder if available at the time would have sorted all that out. I had a very brief look at the combination recently and decided BBIagent setup was less involved. If you go to http://BBIagent.net you can do the demo (select Applet or Plugin, etc.), password is BBIagent and you can see the sorts of things you can do via "Virtual Services", "Access Control", "Security Control" etc. You can also add/modify/delete stuff in the demo so you can see what it is like on your box and it's realtime, you don't have to take it down to do modifications, e.g if you open a port to one of your boxes and you decide to change to another box or port, you just hightlight the entry in "Virtual Services" and "Access Control", modify the stuff in the setup boxes at the top, hit the Modify button and that's done, that's the way I've been able to switch gnomemeting, gtk-gnutella and hamradio VOIP progs from one box to another when one kicks the can or has to have new hardware or a distro installed. Regards Sid. -- Sid Boyce ... Hamradio License G3VBV, Keen licensed Private Pilot Retired IBM Mainframes and Sun Servers Tech Support Specialist Microsoft Windows Free Zone - Linux used for all Computing Tasks