Datasheet Firewall H3C NS-SecPath F100-C-A2 |
Part number | NS-SecPath F100-C-A2 |
Ports | 10× GE + 2× SFP 1x USB 2.0 1x Console RJ45 |
Storage media | TF card with a maximum size of 500 GB |
Firewall throughput (1518-byte packet/ IMIX packet/ 64-byte packet) | 700M/400M/100M |
DPI |
Throughput (application identification) | 600M |
Throughput (IPS + application identification | 600M |
Throughput (IPS + AV + application identification, detection of all types of threats | 500M |
Maximum number of concurrent connections | 0.9 million |
Maximum number of newly established connections per second (HTTP) | 8000 |
Flash | 512MB |
RAM | 2GB |
Ambient temperature | Operating: 0°C to 45°C (32°F to 113°F) Storage: –40°C to +70°C (–40°F to +158°F) |
Operating mode | Route, transparent, or hybrid |
AAA | Portal authentication RADIUS authentication HWTACACS authentication PKI/CA (X.509 format) authentication Domain authentication CHAP authentication PAP authentication |
Firewall | SOP virtual firewall technology, which supports full virtualization of hardware resources, including CPU, memories, and storage Security zone Attack protection against malicious attacks, such as land, smurf, fraggle, ping of death, teardrop, IP spoofing, IP fragmentation, ARP spoofing, reverse ARP lookup, invalid TCP flag, large ICMP packet, address/port scanning, SYN flood, ICMP flood, UDP flood, and DNS query flood Basic and advanced ACLs Time range-based ACL User-based and application-based access control ASPF application layer packet filtering Static and dynamic blacklist function MAC-IP binding MAC-based ACL 802.1Q VLAN transparent transmission |
Antivirus | Signature-based virus detection Manual and automatic upgrade for the signature database Stream-based processing Virus detection based on HTTP, FTP, SMTP, and POP3 Virus types include Backdoor, Email-Worm, IM-Worm, P2P-Worm, Trojan, AdWare, and Virus Virus logs and reports |
Deep intrusion prevention | Prevention against common attacks such as hacker, worm/virus, Trojan, malicious code, spyware/adware, DoS/DDoS, buffer overflow, SQL injection, and IDS/IPS bypass Attack signature categories (based on attack types and target systems) and severity levels (including high, medium, low, and notification) Manual and automatic upgrade for the attack signature database (TFTP and HTTP). P2P/IM traffic identification and control |
Email/webpage/application layer filtering | Email filtering SMTP email address filtering Email subject/content/attachment filtering Webpage filtering HTTP URL/content filtering Java blocking ActiveX blocking SQL injection attack prevention |
NAT | Many-to-one NAT, which maps multiple internal addresses to one public address Many-to-many NAT, which maps multiple internal addresses to multiple public addresses One-to-one NAT, which maps one internal address to one public address NAT of both source address and destination address External hosts access to internal servers Internal address to public interface address mapping NAT support for DNS Setting effective period for NAT NAT ALGs for NAT ALG, including DNS, FTP, H.323, ILS, MSN, NBT, PPTP, and SIP |
VPN | L2TP VPN IPSec VPN GRE VPN SSL VPN |
IPv6 | IPv6 status firewall IPv6 attack protection IPv6 forwarding IPv6 protocols such as ICMPv6, PMTU, Ping6, DNS6, TraceRT6, Telnet6, DHCPv6 Client, and DHCPv6 Relay IPv6 routing: RIPng, OSPFv3, BGP4+, static routing, policy-based routing IPv6 multicast: PIM-SM, and PIM-DM IPv6 transition techniques: NAT-PT, IPv6 tunneling, NAT64 (DNS64), and DS-LITE IPv6 security: NAT-PT, IPv6 tunnel, IPv6 packet filter, RADIUS, IPv6 zone pair policies, IPv6 connection limit |
High availability | Active/active and active/standby RBM stateful failover Configuration synchronization of two firewalls IKE state synchronization in IPsec VPN VRRP |
Configuration management | Configuration management at the CLI Remote management through Web Device management through H3C IMC SSM SNMPv3, compatible with SNMPv2 and SNMPv1 Intelligent security policy |
Environmental protection | EU RoHS compliance |