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Juniper Networks Secure Access SSL VPN appliances provide a
complete range of remote access appliances for the smallest
companies up to the largest service providers. As a system
administrator or security professional, this comprehensive
configuration guide will allow you to configure these appliances to
allow remote and mobile access for employees. If you manage and
secure a larger enterprise, this book will help you to provide
remote and/or extranet access, for employees, partners, and
customers from a single platform.
* Complete coverage of the Juniper Networks Secure Access SSL VPN
line including the 700, 2000, 4000, 6000, and 6000 SP.
* Learn to scale your appliances to meet the demands of remote
workers and offices.
* Use the NEW coordinated threat control with Juniper Networks IDP
to manage the security of your entire enterprise.
Great Reference GuideReviewed by James Oryszczyn, 2009-12-07
If you are looking for a book that will help you configure the Juniper SA appliance very quickly, this is the book. It very easy to follow with great examples.
Excellent book, a must for any Juniper SA installation.Reviewed by J. Armenteros, 2008-07-26
This is an excellent book. It provides a lot of helpful information on how to set up a Juniper SA appliance. The information in this book has helped us organize the user and resource profiles in our installation, as well as set up remote access to Citrix applications. I recommend this book to anyone setting up or administering a Juniper Secure Access SSL VPN.
Very useful book.Reviewed by Daniel J. Smart, 2008-05-22
I've read the book a couple of times now, and find it very helpful.
The book is filled with good advice. I would have found it more
useful if it had more suggestions and best practices, instead of
just explaining the various options. I found the Terminal Services
and Citrix chapter very confusing. The most transparent way to run
Citrix under windows is using the CTS service with a Resource
Profile when running with a Citrix Web Interface server. For Mac, I
find running Network Connect with an limited ACL to allow running
directly with the Citrix Web Interface works best. It would be
helpful to give some "best practices" of when to use each
deployment method.
One area that took a while for me to understand was executing Host
Checker policies in the realm. Page 89 doesn't stress this, but you
MUST "Evaluate Policy" in the realm to use that policy in a role. I
found it much better to enforce a HC policy in the role, NOT in the
realm. This is especially true if you have multiple realms on a
signin page. Getting remediation to work the way you want it to is
not trivial.
The authentication section was very good. Missing was information
on properly setting up LDAP group settings such as recommended
setting of Reverse Group Search and Nested Group Level. JTAC
suggested turning off Reverse Search and maxing nesting between 5
and 7 but no more than 7. The whole thing with the Server Catalog
is confusing and could be explained.
Finally, I would have liked a lot more emphasis on User Session
Policy Tracing, and more real life suggestions on what to look for.
Also, I have never successfully used Simulation in a meaningful
way. If it is useful, examples of how to set it up would be
helpful.
Again, a very useful book with a lot of great info. I'd just like
to see a little more "Cookbook" style examples of real world setup
issues.
-=Dan=-
Comments from the AuthorReviewed by Neil R. Wyler, 2007-12-24
So I realize my rating is a little biased, but I had some things to
say and I couldn't find a place for an author to leave their
remarks, so here they are. If you could pick a rating that didn't
count I would have done that, but alas you can not, and I'm not
going to ding myself or my co-authors for that.
First, if you're looking at buying this book, or have already
purchased this book, then I'd like to say thank you. So, Thank You.
I hope you enjoy the book and I hope you find what you're looking
for inside its pages.
Let me start off by saying that as the title states, this is a
configuration guide. It always bothers me when I see someone review
a book complaining about how some of the information is too basic.
This book is meant to be a guide for beginners to experts, it will
obviously cover some things that are basic but hopefully has enough
advanced material to keep seasoned users happy as well.
To the beginners, you're going to love it. I would have loved to
have had this book when I first started working with this device,
which is why this book exists now; I couldn't find what I needed,
so I got a few friends together and we did something about that. It
covers everything you need to hit the ground running and walks you
through how to do it. We've got enough screenshots in here that you
should be able to find any menu you're looking for or just verify
that you're on the right screen when you see it.
To the experts, you should enjoy this too. Hey, we all love the
Admin Guide that Juniper provides us with, but lets be honest, it's
unbelievably huge and can sometimes be a little hard to understand.
This book puts things in plain English and explains them so you
only have to read them once, not ten times, before you get the
"Aha!" you're looking for. It should also be a great quick
reference guide for you when you can't recall how to configure
something, though you've done it a thousand times. And last, but
certainly not least, you can hand it to the new guy and tell him to
read it rather than having to explain everything to him.
Now of course a book wouldn't be a book without errors, and we have
ours too. Does this bother me? Yes. Does this make me insane? You
bet. Is this a reality of the publishing world? I'm quickly
learning that it is.
Chapter 1 is "Defining a Firewall". What the heck is a firewall
chapter doing as Chapter 1 of a VPN book? I asked the same
question, nay, I yelled it at the top of my lungs(Though my
language was more colorful). This chapter was used by the publisher
as a placeholder for the original Chapter 1 material, which is the
current Introduction. Somewhere in the formation of the book, as
the deadlines loomed and were surpassed(Sorry about that
pre-orderers), things were getting rushed to the printer and the
placeholder ended up more than just a placeholder. I assumed(Silly
me) as the book went to print that this was not the case. So what
does this mean?
It means there's extra information in the book that doesn't exactly
fit its theme. Is this bad information? Not at all, the chapter is
sound information, it just doesn't quite belong, and in future
revisions of the book it will not be there. I think the current
Introduction of the book does a far better job of introducing it,
and in future prints will take the place of Chapter 1.
I want to stress that the rest of the book is SOLID! We work with
these devices every day, many of us at Juniper Networks, or working
directly for Juniper Networks. Will this book have everything you
want? I hope so, I sincerely do. If it doesn't, I'm sorry, all I
can say is drop me a line and we'll see what we can do in the
Second Edition. So thanks again for reading our book, and thank you
for taking the time to read my comments as well.
Great Book!!Reviewed by Amy Fletcher, 2007-12-06
Very comprehensive, has lots of tips which are not in the manual. It also talks about some of the next-generation technologies, and other offerings traditional VPNs just cannot do. Highly recommended!