Depending on your environment, your 2nd scenario can be
a reasonable solution:
: Senario 2: Change firewall rules to give acces from DMZ to LAN.
:
: Plus side: Cost less and easyer management
: Down side: Hole in Firewall
: (I did some test with Veritas Backup exec and it is
:
, but I can't think
of any off hand. Let me know what you go with.
Matt
-Original Message-
From: "Erik Vincent" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: 06/18/2003 12:00:13 PM
To: "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: DMZ, Tape Back
Hello Erik,
as always in security, the level of security increases with the costs.
Your third method you disqualified by the down side you mentioned. To
get this soluten secure you even have to invest extra money, so your
plus side isn't that high. Never bypass your firewall!!
The second solutio
Erik,
here's how I would reason if I were to set this up.
> Scenario 1: Put a tape unit/software in the DMZ and another one on the
> LAN to have everything separate.
>
> Plus side: No hole in DMZ Firewall
> Down Side: Cost (2 unit/software), 2 sofware to manage
Using identical software, manageme
Hello to all,
I would like to have comment on how to setup a backup strategie
regarding a DMZ.
Scenario 1: Put a tape unit/software in the DMZ and another one on the
LAN to have everything separate.
Plus side: No hole in DMZ Firewall
Down Side: Cost (2 unit/software), 2 sofware to manage
Senar