A VSX Gateway is a physical machine that serves as a container for Virtual Systems and other virtual network components. This section has step-by-step procedures for creating and configuring standalone VSX Gateways.
After you create a VSX Gateway, you can modify the topology, other parameters, and advanced configurations in the VSX Gateway Properties window. To open this window, double-click on the VSX Gateway object in SmartConsole. The VSX Gateway Properties window opens.
In the General Properties page, check and re-establish SIC trust, and activate Check Point products for this VSX Gateway.
You can change these properties:
You can test and reset SIC trust and also see the VSX Gateway Relative Distinguished Name.
To initialize SIC trust:
You can also search for the VSX Gateway in the Object Explorer.
Note - If you cannot establish trust, click Test SIC Status to see the reason for the failure. The most common issues are an incorrect activation key and connectivity problems between the Management Server and the VSX Gateway.
To reset SIC trust with the VSX Gateway:
cpconfig
utility to re-initialize the SIC.cpstop;cpstart
Select the Check Point Software Blades to install on this VSX Gateway from the list. The items you see are available for the product version and your license agreement.
The Creation Templates page displays the creation template used to create the Virtual Systems for this VSX Gateway. You can change from the current creation template to the Custom Configuration template and change the shared physical interface if the Shared Interface template is active.
The Physical Interfaces page lets you add or delete a physical interface on the VSX Gateway, and to define a VLAN trunk.
The Topology page contains definitions for interfaces and routes between interfaces and Virtual Devices.
The Interfaces section defines interfaces and links to devices. You can add new interfaces, and delete or modify existing interfaces.
To add an interface:
The Interface Properties window opens.
Click Actions > Copy to Clipboard to copy the Interfaces table in CSV format.
The Routes section of the Topology window defines routes between network devices, network addresses, and Virtual Devices. Some routes are defined automatically based on the interface definitions. You can add, change, and delete routes.
To add a default route to the routing table:
The Default Gateway window opens.
The default route is added to the routing table.
The Route Configuration window opens.
To add a new route to the routing table:
The Route Configuration window opens.
To change a route:
The Route Configuration window opens.
To delete a route:
A confirmation window opens.
Select the Calculating topology automatically based on routing information option to let VSX automatically calculate the network topology based on interface and routing definitions. When enabled, VSX creates automatic links, or connectivity cloud objects linked to existing internal or external networks.
Note - If you wish to enable Anti-Spoofing protection when there are no routes pointing to internal networks, disable the Calculating topology automatically based on routing information option. Modify the appropriate interface definitions to enable Anti-Spoofing. |
When you delete a VSX Gateway object, the operation automatically deletes all Virtual Systems and other Virtual Devices associated with that VSX Gateway from the management database.
To delete a VSX Gateway:
In the event of a catastrophic VSX Gateway failure, you can restore the VSX Gateway configuration and its Virtual Device configuration.
For VSX Gateway that runs on Gaia OS:
Follow the instructions in the sk100395: How to backup and restore VSX gateway.