"Jetro" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:%(E-Mail Removed)...
> I would agree with the 'light-weight' definition if you mean 'one-way' or
> 'input/inbound only'.
We can bat words around all day, but the whole term "firewall" is just a
generic "slang" term to begin with. Cisco in their CCNA Certification
material refers to a regular LAN router as a "broadcast firewall" because it
blocks broadcasts from moving across subnets. Anything that prevents
packets from moving from point A to point B is technically a "Firewall".
Even RRAS on Server2000 & 2003 can be made into a "firewall" by using either
NAT or by using only packet filtering if NAT isn't required,...most often
both are combined together. A device is classified as a firewall by what is
does with the flow of data, not by having to meet someone's arbitrary
"quality standard".
Firewalls have been around long before anyone ever heard of "stateful
filtering" and any of the other modern concepts people think of today. There
were firewalls in private high security environments even before there was
an Internet for that matter.
--
Phillip Windell [MCP, MVP, CCNA]
www.wandtv.com