I know that Real-Time was working on a CD-ROM based firewall.  It was a
little NIC computer based on iptables with secure shell interface.

Nate or Bob, are you guys still working on that?

Thanks,

James Spinti
jspinti at dartdist dot com
952-368-3278 ext. 396
952-368-3255 (fax)
----- Original Message -----
From: "cris0027" <cris0027 at umn.edu>
To: <tclug-list at mn-linux.org>
Sent: Monday, December 31, 2001 5:29 PM
Subject: Re: [TCLUG] Floppy based firewall


> I've been planning to set up a firewall, and was about to try using
> Smoothwall.  Thanks for pointing out those weak points out before I found
> them the hard way.  Smoothwall is a nice looking product, but I think I'd
> at least like complete port coverage.  There are win-do'hs machines on the
> other side, and I'd really like to avoid that kind of thing.  Can we say,
> "trojan bait"?
>
> I've regretably been out of the Linux fold for a while, so all of my Linux
> kung-fu has become rather rusty.  My old firewall/IP-masq box, while
> theoretically still operational, is out of date and (at the moment) I
can't
> remember how the heck it was set up in the first place.  I've been avidly
> reading this thread (and archived threads), but I haven't been able to
come
> to any definite conclusions.  Can anyone make any glowing recommendations
> about the security, ease, magical properties, efficiency, and/or mojo of
> any particular option?  Smoothwall was at the top of my list, but now I'm
> not so sure.  Also on the list are FreeSCO and Coyote, but again, I'm at a
> loss to choose one.  Can anyone help guide my re-education?
>
> Thanks,
>   --Lawrence Crisp
>     cris0027 at tc.umn.edu