Tag Archives: fortigate Benefits of Virtual Domains

Benefits of Virtual Domains

Benefits of Virtual Domains

VDOMs provide the following benefits:

  • Easier administration
  • Continued security
  • Savings in physical space and power
  • Improving Transparent mode configuration
  • More flexible MSSP configurations

 

Easier administration

VDOMs provide separate security domains that allow separate zones, user authentication, firewall policies, routing, and VPN configurations. VDOMs separate security domains and simplify administration of complex configurations—you do not have to manage as many settings at one time.

By default, each FortiGate unit has a VDOM named root. This VDOM includes all of the unit’s physical interfaces, modem, VLAN subinterfaces, zones, firewall policies, routing settings, and VPN settings.

Also, you can optionally assign an administrator account restricted to one VDOM. If the VDOM is created to serve an organization, this feature enables the organization to manage its own configuration.

Each physical FortiGate unit requires a FortiGuard license to access security updates. VDOMs do not require any additional FortiGuard licenses, or updating — all the security updates for all the VDOMs are performed once per update at the global level. Combined this can be a potentially large money and time saving feature in your network.

Management systems such as SNMP, logging, alert email, FDN-based updates, and NTP-based time setting use addresses and routing in the management VDOM to communicate with the network. They can connect only to network resources that communicate with the management VDOM. Using a separate VDOM for management traffic enables easier management of the FortiGate unit global settings, and VDOM administrators can also manage their VDOMs more easily.

 

Continued security

When a packet enters a VDOM, it is confined to that VDOM and is subject to any firewall policies for connections between VLAN subinterfaces or zones in that VDOM, just like those interfaces on a FortiGate unit without VDOMs enabled.

To travel between VDOMs, a packet must first pass through a firewall policy on a physical interface. The packet then arrives at another VDOM on that same FortiGate unit, but on a different interface, where it must pass through another firewall before entering. It doesn’t matter if the interface is physical or virtual — inter-VDOM packets still require the same security measures as when passing through physical interfaces.

VDOMs provide an additional level of security because regular administrator accounts are specific to one VDOM— an administrator restricted to one VDOM cannot change information on other VDOMs. Any configuration changes and potential errors will apply only to that VDOM and limit any potential down time. Using this concept, you can farther split settings so that the management domain is only accessible by the super_admin and does not share any settings with the other VDOMs.

 

Savings in physical space and power

To increase the number of physical FortiGate units, you need more rack space, cables, and power to install the new units. You also need to change your network configuration to accommodate the new physical units. In the future, if you need fewer physical units you are left with expensive hardware that is idle.

Increasing VDOMs involves no additional hardware, no additional cabling, and very few changes to existing networking configurations. VDOMs save physical space and power. You are limited only by the size of the VDOM license you buy and the physical resources on the FortiGate unit.

For example, if you are using one FortiGate 620B unit with 10 VDOMs instead of 10 physical units, over a year you will save an estimated 18,000 kWh. You could potentially save ten times that amount with a 100 VDOM license.

By default, most FortiGate units support 10 VDOMs. Many FortiGate models support purchasing a license key to increase the maximum number.

 

Improving Transparent mode configuration

When VDOMs are not enabled and you put your FortiGate unit into Transparent mode, all the interfaces on your unit become broadcast interfaces. The problem with this is that there are no interfaces free to do anything else.

With multiple VDOMs you can have one of them configured in Transparent mode, and the rest in NAT/Route mode. In this configuration, you have an available transparent mode FortiGate unit you can drop into your network for troubleshooting, and you also have the standard NAT for networking.

 

More flexible MSSP configurations

If you are a managed security and service provider (MSSP), VDOMs are fundamental to your business. As a service provider you have multiple customers, each with their own needs and service plans. VDOMs allow you to have a separate configuration for each customer, or group of customers; with up to 500 VDOMs configured per FortiGate unit on high end models.

Not only does this provide the exact level of service needed by each customer, but administration of the FortiGate unit is easier as well – you can provide uninterrupted service generally with immediate changes as required. Most importantly, it allows you to only use the resources that each customer needs. Inter-VDOM links allow you to customize the level of interaction you need between each of your customers and your administrators.


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