AWS Terminology
Table of Contents
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- VM-Series Deployments
- VM-Series in High Availability
- IPv6 Support on Public Cloud
- Enable Jumbo Frames on the VM-Series Firewall
- Hypervisor Assigned MAC Addresses
- Custom PAN-OS Metrics Published for Monitoring
- Interface Used for Accessing External Services on the VM-Series Firewall
- PacketMMAP and DPDK Driver Support
- Enable NUMA Performance Optimization on the VM-Series
- Enable ZRAM on the VM-Series Firewall
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- VM-Series Firewall Licensing
- Create a Support Account
- Serial Number and CPU ID Format for the VM-Series Firewall
- Use Panorama-Based Software Firewall License Management
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- Maximum Limits Based on Tier and Memory
- Activate Credits
- Create a Deployment Profile
- Manage a Deployment Profile
- Register the VM-Series Firewall (Software NGFW Credits)
- Provision Panorama
- Migrate Panorama to a Software NGFW License
- Transfer Credits
- Renew Your Software NGFW Credits
- Deactivate License (Software NGFW Credits)
- Delicense Ungracefully Terminated Firewalls
- Set the Number of Licensed vCPUs
- Customize Dataplane Cores
- Migrate a Firewall to a Flexible VM-Series License
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- Generate Your OAuth Client Credentials
- Manage Deployment Profiles Using the Licensing API
- Create a Deployment Profile Using the Licensing API
- Update a Deployment Profile Using the Licensing API
- Get Serial Numbers Associated with an Authcode Using the API
- Deactivate a VM-Series Firewall Using the API
- What Happens When Licenses Expire?
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- Supported Deployments on VMware vSphere Hypervisor (ESXi)
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- Plan the Interfaces for the VM-Series for ESXi
- Provision the VM-Series Firewall on an ESXi Server
- Perform Initial Configuration on the VM-Series on ESXi
- Add Additional Disk Space to the VM-Series Firewall
- Use VMware Tools on the VM-Series Firewall on ESXi and vCloud Air
- Use vMotion to Move the VM-Series Firewall Between Hosts
- Use the VM-Series CLI to Swap the Management Interface on ESXi
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- Supported Deployments of the VM-Series Firewall on VMware NSX-T (North-South)
- Components of the VM-Series Firewall on NSX-T (North-South)
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- Install the Panorama Plugin for VMware NSX
- Enable Communication Between NSX-T Manager and Panorama
- Create Template Stacks and Device Groups on Panorama
- Configure the Service Definition on Panorama
- Deploy the VM-Series Firewall
- Direct Traffic to the VM-Series Firewall
- Apply Security Policy to the VM-Series Firewall on NSX-T
- Use vMotion to Move the VM-Series Firewall Between Hosts
- Extend Security Policy from NSX-V to NSX-T
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- Components of the VM-Series Firewall on NSX-T (East-West)
- VM-Series Firewall on NSX-T (East-West) Integration
- Supported Deployments of the VM-Series Firewall on VMware NSX-T (East-West)
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- Install the Panorama Plugin for VMware NSX
- Enable Communication Between NSX-T Manager and Panorama
- Create Template Stacks and Device Groups on Panorama
- Configure the Service Definition on Panorama
- Launch the VM-Series Firewall on NSX-T (East-West)
- Add a Service Chain
- Direct Traffic to the VM-Series Firewall
- Apply Security Policies to the VM-Series Firewall on NSX-T (East-West)
- Use vMotion to Move the VM-Series Firewall Between Hosts
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- Install the Panorama Plugin for VMware NSX
- Enable Communication Between NSX-T Manager and Panorama
- Create Template Stacks and Device Groups on Panorama
- Configure the Service Definition on Panorama
- Launch the VM-Series Firewall on NSX-T (East-West)
- Create Dynamic Address Groups
- Create Dynamic Address Group Membership Criteria
- Generate Steering Policy
- Generate Steering Rules
- Delete a Service Definition from Panorama
- Migrate from VM-Series on NSX-T Operation to Security Centric Deployment
- Extend Security Policy from NSX-V to NSX-T
- Use In-Place Migration to Move Your VM-Series from NSX-V to NSX-T
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- Deployments Supported on AWS
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- Planning Worksheet for the VM-Series in the AWS VPC
- Launch the VM-Series Firewall on AWS
- Launch the VM-Series Firewall on AWS Outpost
- Create a Custom Amazon Machine Image (AMI)
- Encrypt EBS Volume for the VM-Series Firewall on AWS
- Use the VM-Series Firewall CLI to Swap the Management Interface
- Enable CloudWatch Monitoring on the VM-Series Firewall
- VM-Series Firewall Startup and Health Logs on AWS
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- Use AWS Secrets Manager to Store VM-Series Certificates
- Use Case: Secure the EC2 Instances in the AWS Cloud
- Use Case: Use Dynamic Address Groups to Secure New EC2 Instances within the VPC
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- Intelligent Traffic Offload
- Software Cut-through Based Offload
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- Deployments Supported on Azure
- Deploy the VM-Series Firewall from the Azure Marketplace (Solution Template)
- Deploy the VM-Series Firewall from the Azure China Marketplace (Solution Template)
- Deploy the VM-Series with the Azure Gateway Load Balancer
- Create a Custom VM-Series Image for Azure
- Deploy the VM-Series Firewall on Azure Stack
- Deploy the VM-Series Firewall on Azure Stack HCI
- Enable Azure Application Insights on the VM-Series Firewall
- Set up Active/Passive HA on Azure
- Use Azure Key Vault to Store VM-Series Certificates
- Use the ARM Template to Deploy the VM-Series Firewall
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- About the VM-Series Firewall on Google Cloud Platform
- Supported Deployments on Google Cloud Platform
- Create a Custom VM-Series Firewall Image for Google Cloud Platform
- Prepare to Set Up VM-Series Firewalls on Google Public Cloud
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- Deploy the VM-Series Firewall from Google Cloud Platform Marketplace
- Management Interface Swap for Google Cloud Platform Load Balancing
- Use the VM-Series Firewall CLI to Swap the Management Interface
- Enable Google Stackdriver Monitoring on the VM Series Firewall
- Enable VM Monitoring to Track VM Changes on Google Cloud Platform (GCP)
- Use Dynamic Address Groups to Secure Instances Within the VPC
- Use Custom Templates or the gcloud CLI to Deploy the VM-Series Firewall
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- Prepare Your ACI Environment for Integration
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- Create a Virtual Router and Security Zone
- Configure the Network Interfaces
- Configure a Static Default Route
- Create Address Objects for the EPGs
- Create Security Policy Rules
- Create a VLAN Pool and Domain
- Configure an Interface Policy for LLDP and LACP for East-West Traffic
- Establish the Connection Between the Firewall and ACI Fabric
- Create a VRF and Bridge Domain
- Create an L4-L7 Device
- Create a Policy-Based Redirect
- Create and Apply a Service Graph Template
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- Create a VLAN Pool and External Routed Domain
- Configure an Interface Policy for LLDP and LACP for North-South Traffic
- Create an External Routed Network
- Configure Subnets to Advertise to the External Firewall
- Create an Outbound Contract
- Create an Inbound Web Contract
- Apply Outbound and Inbound Contracts to the EPGs
- Create a Virtual Router and Security Zone for North-South Traffic
- Configure the Network Interfaces
- Configure Route Redistribution and OSPF
- Configure NAT for External Connections
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- Choose a Bootstrap Method
- VM-Series Firewall Bootstrap Workflow
- Bootstrap Package
- Bootstrap Configuration Files
- Generate the VM Auth Key on Panorama
- Create the bootstrap.xml File
- Prepare the Licenses for Bootstrapping
- Prepare the Bootstrap Package
- Bootstrap the VM-Series Firewall on AWS
- Bootstrap the VM-Series Firewall on Azure
- Bootstrap the VM-Series Firewall on Azure Stack HCI
- Bootstrap the VM-Series Firewall on Google Cloud Platform
- Verify Bootstrap Completion
- Bootstrap Errors
AWS Terminology
This document assumes that you are familiar with the
networking and configuration of the AWS VPC. In order to provide
context for the terms used in this section, here is a brief refresher
on the AWS terms (some definitions are taken directly from the AWS
glossary) that are referred to in this document:
Term | Description |
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EC2 | Elastic Compute Cloud A web service
that enables you to launch and manage Linux/UNIX and Windows server
instances in Amazon's data centers. |
AMI | Amazon Machine Image An AMI provides
the information required to launch an instance, which is a virtual
server in the cloud. The VM-Series AMI is an encrypted machine
image that includes the operating system required to instantiate
the VM-Series firewall on an EC2 instance. |
ELB | Elastic Load Balancing ELB is an Amazon
web service that helps you improve the availability and scalability
of your applications by routing traffic across multiple Elastic
Compute Cloud (EC2) instances. ELB detects unhealthy EC2 instances
and reroutes traffic to healthy instances until the unhealthy instances
are restored. ELB can send traffic only to the primary interface of
the next hop load-balanced EC2 instance. So, to use ELB with a VM-Series
firewall on AWS, the firewall must be able to use the primary interface
for dataplane traffic. |
ENI | Elastic Network Interface An additional
network interface that can be attached to an EC2 instance. ENIs
can include a primary private IP address, one or more secondary private
IP addresses, a public IP address, an elastic IP address (optional),
a MAC address, membership in specified security groups, a description,
and a source/destination check flag. |
IP address types for EC2 instances | An EC2 instance can have different types
of IP addresses.
An instance in a public subnet
can have a Private IP address, a Public IP address, and an Elastic
IP address (EIP); an instance in a private subnet will have a private
IP address and optionally have an EIP. |
Instance type | Amazon-defined specifications that stipulate
the memory, CPU, storage capacity, and hourly cost for an instance.
Some instance types are designed for standard applications, whereas
others are designed for CPU-intensive, memory-intensive applications,
and so on. |
VPC | Virtual Private Cloud An elastic network
populated by infrastructure, platform, and application services
that share common security and interconnection. |
IGW | Internet gateway provided by Amazon. Connects
a network to the internet. You can route traffic for IP addresses outside
your VPC to the internet gateway. |
IAM Role | Identity and Access Management Required
for enabling High Availability for the VM-Series firewall on AWS. The
IAM role defines the API actions and resources the application can use
after assuming the role. On failover, the IAM Role allows the VM-Series
firewall to securely make API requests to switch the dataplane interfaces
from the active peer to the passive peer. An IAM role is also
required for VM Monitoring. See List
of Attributes Monitored on the AWS VPC. |
Subnets | A segment of the IP address range of a VPC
to which EC2 instances can be attached. EC2 instances are grouped
into subnets based on your security and operational needs. There
are two types of subnets:
|
Security groups | A security group is attached to an ENI and
it specifies the list of protocols, ports, and IP address ranges
that are allowed to establish inbound/outbound connections on the
interface. In the AWS VPC, security groups and network
ACLs control inbound and outbound traffic; security groups regulate
access to the EC2 instance, while network ACLs regulate access to
the subnet. Because you are deploying the VM-Series firewall, set
more permissive rules in your security groups and network ACLs and
allow the firewall to safely enable applications in the VPC. |
Route tables | A set of routing rules that controls the
traffic leaving any subnet that is associated with the route table.
A subnet can be associated with only one route table. |
Key pair | A set of security credentials you use to
prove your identity electronically. The key pair consists of a private
key and a public key. At time of launching the VM-Series firewall,
you must generate a key pair or select an existing key pair for
the VM-Series firewall. The private key is required to access the
firewall in maintenance mode. |
CloudWatch | Amazon CloudWatch is a monitoring service
that allows you to collect and track metrics for the VM-Series firewalls
on AWS. When enabled, the firewalls use AWS APIs to publish native
PAN-OS metrics to CloudWatch. |