Maybe it's a typo on #4, but if there are 100 rules, wouldn't the 101st rule be the implicit any-any-drop? How can you measure throughput of traffic matching a drop rule?
Mark Ingles At 03:04 PM 10/12/2001 -0700, Raymond N wrote: >I got some useful info from Nokia pre-sales support. I attach info from >that support guy below, incase someone in this mailing list also has >similar questions... > >---------------------- >1. Gigabit ethernet cards are available and fully supported in the >IP530, IP650 and IP740 >2. The IP530, IP650 and IP740 fully support unlimited-IP-address Check >Point licenses. >3. The IP530, IP650 and IP740 all support in excess of 100,000 >concurrent connections. >4. The throughput of each box is as follows IP650 - 350 Mbps, IP530 - >500 Mbps, IP740 - 2000 Mbps (2 Gbps). These numbers are obtained with >100 firewall rules, and traffic matching the 101 st. >----------------------- ><snip> =============================================== To unsubscribe from this mailing list, please see the instructions at http://www.checkpoint.com/services/mailing.html ===============================================
