Untangle Firewall In Review

Posted : admin On 06.10.2019

I've been a hard-core Untangle fan for several years now, but I recently wanted to explore other firewall options. Being wrapped around a commercial product, Untangle charges money for its high-end features. However, I figured since most all those features are covered by the open source community, there must be non-commercial options out there. I began my hunt for the best free firewall. I scoured the internet, downloading any and all offerings from 2 principal types of entities: 1. Companies with an open source community branch or free non-trial version, and 2. Open source community projects ('free as in speech' or free software / paid support biz models).

Sophos UTM vs Untangle. For $5/mo or $50/yr which gives you the Untangle NG Firewall complete package with all. My recent review of both products is. Untangle NG Firewall puts you in the driver’s seat. Control everything from content filtering to web caching, remote access to policy enforcement, all from one. Jul 30, 2011 Most reviews are based on trying a product and running it through hypothetical situations to see how it performs. In the case of my Untangle review, I had.

I tried just about every ISO I could get my hands on. I thought I had my work cut out for me since I found far more of them than I had expected. But I did notice some common themes-several of them seemed to share common ancestors / packages (e.g. Squid, Debian, FreeBSD, etc). Here's a list of what I found along with my impressions. Commercial w/ free version Good. 64-bit version available.

awe-inspiring web-based GUI. very easy to setup & get up and running quickly. free version is very functional-plenty of features for most home networks. updating is fully automatic Bad. must pay for high-end features. slow boot-up & shutdown times free & open source Good. 64-bit version available.

Most feature-rich free firewall distro I've ever used. You can get it to land space ships on Mars. solid performance and stability. light and nimble-much faster boot-up/shutdown than Untangle. has a vast following, so the documentation & forums helped me get my head around it Bad.

Not as simple and easy to understand as Untangle. You have to put some time & effort into learning it, especially if you're going to use the add-on packages. Add-on packages and package updating could be better.

Some add-on packages just don't work very well, and updating a package sometimes broke it. This situation has improved as the distro has matured, but I wish they would stop listing buggy alpha-level packages in the add-on repository. While packages like snort and squid behave very well for me; others like modsecurity drive me batty. Free & open source Good. impressive GUI.

package system allows installing add-on features. 64-bit version now available Bad. The package system was a bit rough around the edges-it was hard to tell what I was installing as there were few package descriptions. Free & open source Good.

solid performer. one of the more popular and long-running firewall distros Bad. IPFire is very similar, and seems further along in development-at least in terms of its web GUI.

Didn't seem as easy to extend as other distros free & open source fork of Vyatta Good. 64-bit version available. It has a growing fan-base, particularly among network engineer types that prefer router-like, CLI-only environments. No GUI usually means a light build and nimble performance. Bad. CLI only. To be totally honest, I didn't give this one much of a chance because I was hunting for distros with web GUIs.

CLI might be fine for some people and under some environments, but why bother when other free options give you a GUI? To me the whole point of a firewall distro is its web GUI. Without that, I might as well build my own Linux-based firewall and manually configure the packages.

In its defense, VyOS is considered more of a router distro with firewall features, and not a full-blown UTM distro. Commercial w/ free version Good.

Untangle

64-bit version available. excellent GUI.

popular-has a large following Bad. Free version doesn't allow easy add-on installation. You have to hack it a bit to extend functionality. Commercial w/ free version Good.

clean, functional GUI. one of the more refined distros I found. allows for more config tweaks than Untangle (in the GUI) Bad.

free version doesn't seem to get updated often. I couldn't find a 64-bit version. doesn't seem as extensible as other distros commercial w/ free version Good. 64-bit version available. clean, functional web GUI. lots of features & plugins that go beyond firewall functionality Bad. free feature set isn't as generous as other distros.

No auto updates for IPS/URL filter. It looks like updates are part of their commercial offering. What good is a free version that doesn't update? Commercial w/ free demo Good. gorgeous web-based GUI.

offers a ton of features-it's a full-blown small biz server Bad. full of nag screens asking you to buy commercial versions.

updates are NOT free. the free version is barely functional-it's actually a demo. For security reasons I'm not a big fan of this all-in-one approach when it comes to firewalls. Conclusions I know. I briefly looked at that one too, but it seemed to be more of a router distro for embedded devices, and not so much a true firewall. My goal was to find something with UTM features, something I couldn't find at all in Monowall.

Monowall is worth mentioning, though, since PFSense forked from it. It's also worth mentioning that the Monowall project has officially ended.

Dirk Morris

Now for some of my findings and determinations:. Most commercial w/ free version types worked well out of the box, but were difficult to (freely) extend. This is probably because the extensions are part of their paid offerings. They gotta make money somehow, right? If my priority was getting something up and running quickly or I were building something for a friend or company that wants to self-manage, then I'd go with one of these. Untangle is by far my top choice in this category. Its free offering is very generous, and its management GUI is top-notch.

Most free & open source types took more time & effort to figure out, but were more extendable. If I had free time to burn on learning the quirks and/or were deploying it for system engineer types (like me), then I'd go this route. PFSense is my top choice in this category, and is my current firewall of choice. RAM is cheap and plentiful these days, so I personally tried to stick with 64-bit offerings. True.I may not use that much RAM in my home firewall, but it's nice to know I could recommend the same distro to a client building a beast monster firewall.

A few free & open source distros like IPFire and PFSense had ISOs specifically for headless embedded systems, like Alix boards. If I had an Alix-based system (I used to), I'd probably build it on PFSense or IPFire. So long story short.mad props to PFSense and Untangle, and a well-deserved honorable mention to IPFire. UPDATE - 2013/7/18 A kind reader recommended checking out Sophos (previously known as Astaro) as they recently started offering a free home use version of their UTM. Finding it very impressive, I summarize my experience below. Commercial w/ free home/lite editions Good.

stunning web-based GUI. 64-bit version available. extremely generous feature offering in the home version.

boasts features I haven't seen in other UTMs-e.g. Endpoint protection, wireless protection, central management, etc. Bad. more features means it's more complex to setup and configure. configuration is sometimes unintuitive Sophos is a jaw-dropping UTM, and its free home version license is surprisingly generous. The feature set and web-based GUI easily place it up there with my other 2 top UTM choices-Untangle and PFSense, so it's certainly worth a try-out. My criticisms are few and admittedly strict.

At times I found that the configuration process took a somewhat unintuitive approach. It took some getting used to, and perhaps this is simply because I'm a new user of Sophos. A example of this sometimes unintuitive approach is when configuring country blocking.

If you enable it for a particular country, it blocks all inbound and outbound traffic by default. You then have to create exceptions if you want to allow certain traffic in or out. In my case I want to block just inbound mail (smtp) traffic from numerous countries, but allow all countries to view my internally-hosted website. I also want to allow outbound web browsing to all countries.

Although it does seem possible, my case doesn't seem very intuitive to configure in Sophos. I understand the advantage of such a heavy-handed approach; but it could make configuration difficult, especially for a niche feature like country blocking.

However, the fact such high-end features are even present in Sophos's free offering illuminates its deserved acclaims. Overall I'm very impressed with Sophos. Its free feature set rivals PFSense (which says a lot), while its beautiful GUI rivals Untangle. Here's the link to Sophos's generous free offerings: UPDATE - 2013/9/9 free & open source Good.

64-bit version available. Seems tweaked for headless and low-end systems.

Sunnyvale,John

Innovative 'profile' approach for running off a CD or flash memory device could work for some. Bad. The web GUI is hard to use. I really struggled with finding and configuring even basic settings. Documentation is lacking, making it even harder to get it up and running. Not as easy as other distros to install on a HDD.

I'm not saying it can't be done. It's just more tedious a process compared with other distros. UPDATE - 2015/4/21 free & open source Good. Forked from PFSense, one of my absolute top favorites. Those already familiar with PFSense will feel right at home.

I'm excited to see what the future holds for this distro. Clean, re-imagined web GUI. Nice firmware update system. 64-bit version available. Paid support available Bad.

I couldn't find any add-on packages to extend base functionality. Perhaps this is coming later, as this is a relatively new player. Sometimes the larger fonts of the web GUI made it harder to use. I know I can zoom out in the browser, and maybe I'm just more used to PFSense. Yes, I know I'm being very nit-picky. I enjoy reading this blog and often re-read it for nuggets of information.You have mentioned you like Untangle, how good it is.

I wondered if you had some general/generic configuration profiles that you could share with us. I am a N00b, a know-very little about Linux but would like to learn and use the Untangle firewall but that entails two sets of skills - Linux and firewalls - both of which I am seriously lacking but trying to learn. Do you have any recommended configurations for protecting a home network using Untangle? Looking forward to any input - thanks again. Hi Joe I don't agree that VyOS / Vyatta are 'terrible firewall' distros, at all. If someone calls it terrible, then he probably made the completely wrong decision. VyOS is for Professionals and for sure not for Users which work occasionally every some month with it.

But those users probably don't need this stability, freedom and complexity, anyway. We use VyOS since years and they work great, are rocket solid and very fast. The Firewall works great, too - but it's cumbersome to configure it, because there are no automatic rules for the reverse connections. Kind regards, Tom.

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