
NGFW Firewall
Réduire les risques
Dans l'ensemble du réseau
Combinez un réseau rapide et flexible avec une sécurité de pointe grâce à Forcepoint Next-Generation Firewall (NGFW).
Protéger le réseau contre les menaces avancées.
Forcepoint Next-Generation Firewall offre une sécurité réseau de pointe à grande échelle. Déployez depuis n'importe où dans le monde via la console de gestion sécurisée (SMC) et unifiez la gestion des politiques, la réponse aux incidents et la création de rapports sous une seule console.
Explorez les modèles NGFW Forcepoint

Série 3500
Idéal pour les grandes entreprises, les réseaux de campus et les centres de données.
Jusqu'à 66 interfaces
Débit du pare-feu jusqu'à 600 Gbps
Débit de l'IPS et du NGFW jusqu'à 140 Gbps

Série 3400
Idéal pour les réseaux de campus et les centres de données.
Jusqu'à 67 interfaces
Débit du pare-feu jusqu'à 200-300 Gbps
Débit IPS NGFW jusqu'à 15-35 Gbps

Série 2200
Idéal pour les bureaux de taille moyenne et grande.
Jusqu'à 25 interfaces
Débit du pare-feu jusqu'à 120 Gbps
Débit IPS NGFW jusqu'à 13,5 Gbps

Série 1200
Idéal pour les bureaux de taille moyenne et grande.
Jusqu'à 17 interfaces
Débit du pare-feu jusqu'à 65 Gbps
Débit IPS NGFW jusqu'à 5 Gbps

Série 350
Idéal pour les sites distants et les succursales (conception de bureau).
Jusqu'à 13 interfaces
Débit du pare-feu 40 Gbps
Débit IPS NGFW 2 Gbps (N352) ou 4,1 Gbps (N355)

Série 120
Idéal pour les sites commerciaux et les succursales.
Jusqu'à 8 interfaces
Débit du pare-feu 4 Gbps
Débit IPS NGFW 450 Mbps

Série 60
Idéal pour les bureaux à distance, les succursales et les sites commerciaux.
Jusqu'à 4 interfaces
Débit du pare-feu 2 Gbps
Débit IPS NGFW 350 Mbps
Fiche technique Forcepoint Next Generation Firewall (NGFW)
En savoir plus sur les spécifications du NGFW de Forcepoint, y compris les plates-formes, les caractéristiques, la protection contre les menaces et les fonctionnalités SD-WAN intégrées.
Images cloud :
- Logiciel unifié Forcepoint NGFW
- Amazon Web Services (AWS)
- Microsoft Azure Solutions
- Sécurise à la fois les communications nord-sud entrant/sortant du cloud et le trafic est-ouest du SDN.
Appareils virtuels :
- Logiciel unifié Forcepoint NGFW
- Disponible pour KVM et VMware ESXi et NSX
- Évolutif jusqu'à 64 CPU
- Automatise la microsegmentation du réseau
- Peut être mis en cluster avec des firewalls physiques
Pourquoi Forcepoint NGFW ?
Gestion centralisée avec le SMC
Gérer les politiques réseau, identifier et prévenir les incidents de sécurité en temps réel et examiner les performances des appareils et des applications via le SMC.
Protéger le réseau contre l'inconnu
Associez une sécurité de pointe à une gestion fiable du réseau grâce à des contrôles Zero Trust Network access, à la détection et à la protection avancées contre des programmes malveillants (AMDP), à la prévention des intrusions et à d'autres contrôles.
Déployez des appareils depuis n'importe où
Automatisez, orchestrez et faites évoluer le réseau n'importe où dans le monde avec une large gamme d'appareils physiques et virtuels.
Personnalisez et évoluez avec des interfaces réseau modulaires
Les appareils Forcepoint NGFW haut de gamme, montées en rack acceptent une gamme d'interfaces réseau extensibles, offrant flexibilité et adaptabilité aux nouvelles infrastructures réseau.
Équilibrer les demandes du réseau et éviter les temps d'arrêt
Construisez une résilience et une évolutivité solides du réseau grâce à la mise en grappe de l'équilibrage de la charge et à la prise en charge multi-FAI de l'équilibrage de la charge avec un routage adapté aux applications, y compris la possibilité de mettre à jour les logiciels et les appareils sans interruption de service.
Pourquoi les clients choisissent Forcepoint NGFW
Pourquoi les clients choisissent Forcepoint NGFW
"Our costs - both for the project and maintenance - are going down because we don't need resources locally, we have centralized everything. If we want new service on a train, we define the policy then give the hardware to the operator, who installs it."
Groupe VR
Restez informé pour protéger votre réseau
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a firewall?
A firewall is a network security device that monitors incoming and outgoing network traffic and permits or blocks data packets based on a set of security rules. The purpose of a firewall is to establish a barrier between your internal network and incoming traffic from external sources (such as the internet) in order to block malicious traffic like viruses and hackers.
How does a firewall work?
Firewalls guard traffic at a computer’s entry point, called ports, which is where information is exchanged with external devices. Firewalls carefully analyze incoming traffic based on pre-established rules and filter traffic coming from unsecured or suspicious sources.
Why are firewalls important for organizations?
Firewalls help protect your network from threats. Forcepoint NGFW delivers industry-leading network security at scale. Deploy from anywhere in the world through the Secure Management Console (SMC) and unify policy management, incident response and reporting under one console.
What are features of a NGFW?
Features of a NGFW include:
Deep packet inspection: NGFWs inspect data at each of the four TCP/IP communication layers – application, transport, IP/network and hardware/datalink. This enables next-gen firewalls to operate with application awareness, an understanding about which applications are receiving and generating traffic and the types of user and application behavior that may be expected in those traffic patterns.
Automation and orchestration: NGFWs enable automatic deployment and instant updates that reduce the administrative burden on IT teams.
Intrusion detection/prevention: Next-gen firewalls detect and prevent cyberattacks by inspecting traffic at higher TCP/IP layers and monitoring for potential attacks based on anomalous behavior or specific attack signatures.
Application control: NGFWs provide real-time visibility into users and data interacting with applications, enabling high-risk applications to be identified and blocked when necessary.
Distributed Denial-of-Service (DDoS) protection: NGFWs are stateful technologies that check the characteristics of each connection to detect the many different types of illegitimate requests that may comprise a DDoS attack.
Unified threat management (UTM): NGFW solutions offer comprehensive security services that include antivirus, content filtering, malware infection and mitigation.
What are the types of firewalls?
Firewalls can either be software or hardware, though it’s best to have both. A software firewall is a program installed on each computer and regulates traffic through port numbers and applications, while a physical firewall is a piece of equipment installed between your network and gateway. Below are some specific types of firewalls:
Packet-Filtering Firewalls: Packet-filtering firewalls, the most common type of firewall, examine packets and prohibit them from passing through if they don’t match an established security rule set. This type of firewall checks the packet’s source and destination IP addresses. If packets match those of an “allowed” rule on the firewall, then it is trusted to enter the network.
Next-Generation Firewalls: Next-Generation Firewalls combine traditional firewall technology with additional functionality, such as encrypted traffic inspection, intrusion prevention systems, anti-virus and more. Most notably, it includes deep packet inspection (DPI). While basic firewalls only look at packet headers, deep packet inspection examines the data within the packet itself, enabling users to more effectively identify, categorize or stop packets with malicious data.
Proxy Firewalls: Proxy firewalls filter network traffic at the application level. Unlike basic firewalls, the proxy acts an intermediary between two end systems. The client must send a request to the firewall, where it is then evaluated against a set of security rules and then permitted or blocked. Most notably, proxy firewalls monitor traffic for layer 7 protocols such as HTTP and FTP and use both stateful and deep packet inspection to detect malicious traffic.
Network Address Translation (NAT) Firewalls: NAT firewalls allow multiple devices with independent network addresses to connect to the internet using a single IP address, keeping individual IP addresses hidden. As a result, attackers scanning a network for IP addresses can't capture specific details, providing greater security against attacks. NAT firewalls are similar to proxy firewalls in that they act as an intermediary between a group of computers and outside traffic.
Stateful Multilayer Inspection (SMLI) Firewalls: SMLI firewalls filter packets at the network, transport and application layers, comparing them against known trusted packets. Like NGFW firewalls, SMLI also examine the entire packet and only allow them to pass if they pass each layer individually. These firewalls examine packets to determine the state of the communication (thus the name) to ensure all initiated communication is only taking place with trusted sources.
What is an SD-WAN firewall?
An SD-WAN firewall enhances cybersecurity by monitoring and managing inbound and outbound network traffic within a Software-defined Wide Area Network (SD-WAN).
What is network security?
Network security is a combination of rules and configurations that help protect computer networks and data.
How does network security work?
There are many layers to consider when addressing network security across an organization. Attacks can happen at any layer in the network security layers model, so your network security hardware, software and policies must be designed to address each area. Network security typically consists of three different controls: physical, technical and administrative.
What are types of network security?
Network Access Control
Antivirus and Antimalware Software
Firewall Protection
Virtual Private Networks
What is a network attack?
A network attack is an unauthorized action on digital assets within an organizational network. Malicious parties usually execute network attacks to alter, destroy or steal private data. Perpetrators in network attacks tend to target network perimeters to gain access to internal systems.
What are the types of network attacks?
DDoS: DDoS attacks involve deploying sprawling networks of botnets, which are malware-compromised devices linked to the internet. These bombard and overwhelm enterprise servers with high volumes of fraudulent traffic. Malicious attackers may target time-sensitive data, such as that belonging to healthcare institutions, interrupting access to vital patient database records.
Man-in-the-Middle Attacks (MITM): MITM network attacks occur when malicious parties intercept traffic conveyed between networks and external data sources or within a network. In most cases, hackers achieve MITM attacks via weak security protocols. These enable hackers to convey themselves as a relay or proxy account and manipulate data in real-time transactions.
Unauthorized Access: Unauthorized access refers to network attacks where malicious parties gain access to enterprise assets without seeking permission.
SQL Injection: Unmoderated user data inputs could place organizational networks at risk of SQL injection attacks. Under the network attack method, external parties manipulate forms by submitting malicious codes in place of expected data values. They compromise the network and access sensitive data such as user passwords. There are various SQL injection types, such as examining databases to retrieve details on their version and structure and subverting logic on the application layer, disrupting its logic sequences and function.
What are examples of network attacks?
Social Engineering: Social engineering involves elaborate techniques in deception and trickery techniques, such as phishing, that leverage users’ trust and emotions to gain access to their private data.
Advanced Persistent Threats (APT): Some network attacks may involve APTs from a team of expert hackers. APT parties will prepare and deploy a complex cyber-attacks program. This exploits multiple network vulnerabilities while remaining undetected by network security measures such as firewalls and antivirus software.
Ransomware: In ransomware attacks, malicious parties encrypt data access channels while withholding decryption keys, a model that enables hackers to extort affected organizations.
What is packet loss?
When accessing the internet or any network, small units of data called packets are sent and received. Packet loss is when one or more of these packets fails to reach its intended destination. For users, packet loss manifests itself in the form of network disruption, slow service and even total loss of network connectivity.
What are causes of packet loss?
Network Congestion
Software Bugs
Problems with Network Hardware
Security Threats
What is Defense in Depth (DiD)?
DiD is a cybersecurity approach with a series of defensive mechanisms that are layered to protect valuable data and information.
What is the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) Model?
The OSI Model is a conceptual framework used to describe the functions of a networking system. The OSI model characterizes computing functions into a universal set of rules and requirements in order to support interoperability between different products and software. In the OSI reference model, the communications between a computing system are split into seven different abstraction layers: Physical, Data Link, Network, Transport, Session, Presentation and Application.
What is an Intrusion Prevention System (IPS)?
An IPS is a form of network security that works to detect and prevent identified threats. An IPS is typically configured to use a number of different approaches to protect the network from unauthorized access. These include:
Signature-Based: The signature-based approach uses predefined signatures of well-known network threats. When an attack is initiated that matches one of these signatures or patterns, the system takes necessary action.
Anomaly-Based: The anomaly-based approach monitors for any abnormal or unexpected behavior on the network. If an anomaly is detected, the system blocks access to the target host immediately.
Policy-Based: This approach requires administrators to configure security policies according to organizational security policies and the network infrastructure. When an activity occurs that violates a security policy, an alert is triggered and sent to the system administrators..
How do Intrusion Prevention Systems Work?
Intrusion prevention systems work by scanning all network traffic. There are a number of different threats that an IPS is designed to prevent, including:
- Denial of Service (DoS) attack
- Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack
- Various types of exploits
- Worms
- Viruses
What is branch networking?
Branch networking refers to the elements used to distribute information to, from and among remote sites, stores, branch offices and data centers.
