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GomesLucas
Participant

Blade HTTPS Inspection Behavior

We have doubts about the behavior of the Blade HTTPS Inspection when there are no rules explicitly created: what happens in the communication? We do not have rules, we understand that the communication will not be inspected, therefore it would be a behavior identical to a bypass.

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6 Replies
Chris_Atkinson
Employee Employee
Employee

sk108202 describes the simplified inspection flow.

How is the "fail" mode for the blade configured and what is your objective with having the blade enabled without rules?

@Timothy_Hall has previously posted in detail about the SSL inspection rule order here in case it's helpful for you:

https://community.checkpoint.com/t5/Management/HTTPS-Inspection-Setup/m-p/127750/highlight/true#M278...  

CCSM R77/R80/ELITE
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GomesLucas
Participant

The objective is to understand if there will be bypass or inspect, because even without a rule, it is preventing.

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_Val_
Admin
Admin

Correct, without explicit rules, the implied rule is INSPECT

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PhoneBoy
Admin
Admin

With no rules in the HTTPS Inspection policy, traffic may get pulled out of fastpath that shouldn't be.
That can cause a performance issue.
There should always be an "any any any bypass" at the end of the HTTPS Inspection policy.

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Timothy_Hall
Champion
Champion

"any any any bypass" rule at the end of the HTTPS Inspection Policy makes sense, but in all the CheckMates presentations the final rule is always "any any 'HTTPS Default Services' bypass".  Which is it supposed to be?

Gateway Performance Optimization R81.20 Course
now available at maxpowerfirewalls.com
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_Val_
Admin
Admin

As shown 🙂 Using ANY service there is a bad idea

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