Check Point IPSO explained

Check Point IPSO is the operating system for the 'Check Point firewall' appliance and other security devices, based on FreeBSD, with numerous hardening features applied.[1]

The IP in IPSO refers to Ipsilon Networks, a company specialising in IP switching acquired by Nokia in 1997.[2]

In 2009, Check Point acquired the Nokia security appliance business, including IPSO, from Nokia.[3]

Variations

IPSO, now at version 6.2, is a fork of FreeBSD 6. There were two other systems, called IPSO-SX and IPSO-LX, that were Linux-based:

Check Point offers three lines of security appliances – one based on IPSO 6.x, one based on an operating system called SecurePlatform and the latest based on Gaia platform (RHEL4 based).

Features

IPSO notable features or firsts include:

Versions

IPSO SB was originally derived by Ipsilon Networks from FreeBSD 2.1-STABLE and cross-compiled on FreeBSD 2.2.6-RELEASE and 3.5-RELEASE platforms. Its major components are:

Ipsilon Networks sold IPSO versions up to 2.x as part of the ATM tag-switching solutions that they originally pioneered. IPSO 3.0 onwards were designed to host Check Point FireWall-1 and other third party packages.

IPSO 3.0 to 3.9 spanned from 1999 to 2005 and, while adding many features and significant performance and hardware refinements, were recognizably the same to the administrator.

IPSO 4.0 was not designed as a major update and was internally numbered as IPSO 3.10. However, Check Point software could not process a two-digit dot version, and it also included a refresh of the Voyager HTML interface. Up to that point, JavaScript and frames had been avoided in order to facilitate the use of Lynx as a command line interface. These together resulted in it being renumbered as 4.0.IPSO 4.1 and IPSO 4.2 are incremental releases. IPSO 4.2 will gain source-based routing as its last scheduled new feature. All new development will continue on IPSO 6.x.

IPSO 5.0 build 056 was released in 2009 for VSX R65 support on IP Appliance.

Nokia announced IPSO 6.0 in relation to the IP2450 and IP690 hardware. It is based on FreeBSD 6.x. Its primary advantage over IPSO 4.x are improved memory management, performance, scheduling, threading, POSIX-compliance, and other operating system features. IPSO 6.0.7 was released in 2009 for IP690 and IP2450 with CoreXL (multi-core) support. IPSO 6.1 contains other enhancements from FreeBSD 6.x but without CoreXL support. Because of the step change, Nokia advertised that IPSO 4.2, 6.07 and 6.1 will run alongside each other for a period of time. When Check Point acquired Nokia IP appliance business, 6.07 and 6.1 development branches were merged and combined to 6.2.

Most recent version is IPSO 6.2MR6, released in February 2017.[6]

For a while, Nokia offered IPSO 7, which was actually IPSO LX. It was discontinued after 7.2, in 2008.

After acquiring the Nokia IP appliance business, Check Point announced project Gaia to combine both IPSO and Secure Platform. The first release is expected in 2011.[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nokia/Checkpoint firewall . 2007-04-15 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20060313082831/http://honor.icsalabs.com/pipermail/firewall-wizards/2000-February/007795.html . 13 March 2006 .
  2. Web site: Nokia Acquires Ipsilon Networks, Inc . 2007-04-15 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20060323115712/http://europe.nokia.com/microsites/aboutnokia/company_information/news/news_htmls/ntc_971209a.html . 23 March 2006 .
  3. Web site: Welcome to Check Point . 2009-06-02 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090601153257/http://www.checkpoint.com/nokia/welcome/index.html . 1 June 2009 .
  4. Web site: The latest Nokia phones and accessories | Nokia Phones US.
  5. Web site: SEC Info.
  6. Web site: Support, Support Requests, Training, Documentation, and Knowledge base for Check Point products and services.
  7. Web site: Check Point Project Gaia.