We're generally happy with our Juniper SA6500s, but they, and a lot of the 
other SSL VPN vendor appliances will not support IPSec. Cisco's ASA does, but 
it's less feature-rich in the SSL VPN arena. The Juniper was the most mature 
and flexible of all the offerings we looked at, but also the most expensive, 
and it's not perfect either.

Having migrated from Cisco's 3000 series appliances, the current SSL VPNs are a 
totally different mindset and about two orders of magnitude more complicated. 
Have a very good understanding of exactly what problem you're trying to solve 
with the product and what kind of policies and requirements you have to meet, 
or it's going to be a mess. I can answer more specific questions on our 
experiences and testing off-list.

--
Toivo Voll
University of South Florida
Information Technology Communications




-----Original Message-----
From: Chris Campbell [mailto:chris.campb...@nebulassolutions.com] 
Sent: Friday, March 05, 2010 11:36 AM
To: Dawood Iqbal
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: Best VPN Appliance

The Juniper SA is by far and away the market leader and in my opinion the best 
end user experience.

On 5 Mar 2010, at 15:57, Dawood Iqbal wrote:

> Hello All,
> 
> 
> 
> Is it possible to get your ideas on what VPN appliances are good to have in
> enterprise network?
> 
> 
> 
> Requirements are;
> 
> SSL
> 
> IPSec
> 
> Client and Web VPN support (Win/MAC/iPhone/Android)
> 
> If webvpn is used, then when any user connects via webvpn, we should be able
> to re-direct him to any and ONLY specific application i.e SAP.
> 
> If 2 boxes are installed then they should replicate data seamlessly.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Regards,
> 
> dI
> 


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