Prepare for the future by replacing your aging Cisco ASA firewalls with Juniper’s SRX Series. This step-by-step migration project is easy and the results are immediate.
It’s rather obvious to those in IT that hardware gets old. Many platforms, such as the Cisco ASA firewall, have finite life spans, so it’s time to migrate to the SRX Series and start using its advanced security services. This Day One book walks you step-by-step through a best practice change process that will ease, and actually simplify, a migration from ASA to SRX.
Day One: Migrate Cisco ASA to Juniper SRX Series documents a detailed migration plan that will help you familiarize yourself with the Junos OS and the SRX Series. This book also includes dozens of configuration detail comparisons that will make any cutover, in the lab or in production, successful. Relax, kick back, and learn about how to create a successful ASA to SRX migration path that can be used repeatedly in your network or the networks of your clients.
IT’S DAY ONE AND YOU HAVE A JOB TO DO, SO LEARN HOW TO:
• Replace aging ASA devices with the SRX Series.
• Compare ASA commands with equivalent Junos OS commands.
• Understand the differences between ASA named interfaces and Junos OS zones. • Move from the ASA policy-based VPN towards the SRX Series route-based VPN.
About the Authors Martin Brown is a Network Security Engineer for a tier 1 service provider based in the UK, and a Juniper Ambassador with knowledge that covers a broad range of network devices. Martin started his career in IT 20 years ago supporting Macintosh computers, became an MCSE in 1999, and has since progressed to networking, supporting most of the major manufacturers including Cisco, F5, Checkpoint, and of most importance, Juniper.
Rob Jeffery is the Technical Director at a specialist IT Security VAR & MSSP based in the UK, and has being a Juniper Networks Ambassador since 2013. After spending 8 years working within the hospitality industry, Rob retrained and quickly rose through the ranks. With a vast range of troubleshooting and deployment experience across Check Point, Fortinet, Cisco, Logrhythm, F5 and of course, Juniper.
It’s rather obvious to those in IT that hardware gets old. Many platforms, such as the Cisco ASA firewall, have finite life spans, so it’s time to migrate to the SRX Series and start using its advanced security services. This Day One book walks you step-by-step through a best practice change process that will ease, and actually simplify, a migration from ASA to SRX.
Day One: Migrate Cisco ASA to Juniper SRX Series documents a detailed migration plan that will help you familiarize yourself with the Junos OS and the SRX Series. This book also includes dozens of configuration detail comparisons that will make any cutover, in the lab or in production, successful. Relax, kick back, and learn about how to create a successful ASA to SRX migration path that can be used repeatedly in your network or the networks of your clients.
IT’S DAY ONE AND YOU HAVE A JOB TO DO, SO LEARN HOW TO:
• Replace aging ASA devices with the SRX Series.
• Compare ASA commands with equivalent Junos OS commands.
• Understand the differences between ASA named interfaces and Junos OS zones. • Move from the ASA policy-based VPN towards the SRX Series route-based VPN.
About the Authors Martin Brown is a Network Security Engineer for a tier 1 service provider based in the UK, and a Juniper Ambassador with knowledge that covers a broad range of network devices. Martin started his career in IT 20 years ago supporting Macintosh computers, became an MCSE in 1999, and has since progressed to networking, supporting most of the major manufacturers including Cisco, F5, Checkpoint, and of most importance, Juniper.
Rob Jeffery is the Technical Director at a specialist IT Security VAR & MSSP based in the UK, and has being a Juniper Networks Ambassador since 2013. After spending 8 years working within the hospitality industry, Rob retrained and quickly rose through the ranks. With a vast range of troubleshooting and deployment experience across Check Point, Fortinet, Cisco, Logrhythm, F5 and of course, Juniper.