In R80, Unified Policy is a combination of
In R80, Unified Policy is a combination of
In R80, the Unified Policy combines the Access Control Policy, QoS Policy, Desktop Security Policy, and Threat Prevention Policy. These components work together to provide comprehensive security management by integrating multiple policies into a single unified framework. The unified policy enhances the management and enforcement of security rules across different domains, ensuring a holistic approach to network protection.
The answer is B for R80 : A unified policy is a combination of Access control, QoS, Desktop Security and Threat Prevention policies. Source : Security Administration Student Manual, R80 edition, p 64
answer is B Source: CCSA R80 Theory page 64_Unified Policy
I agree it's B
please link
not threat Prevention or Endpoint is part of Access Control Unify Policy
I can say answer is C: CP R80.40 Security Management AdminGuide (P.169) Define one, unified Access Control Policy. The Access Control Policy lets you create a simple and granular Rule Base that combines all these Access Control features: n Firewall - Control access to and from the internal network. n Application & URL Filtering - Block applications and sites. n Content Awareness - Restrict the Data Types that users can upload or download. n IPsec VPN and Mobile Access - Configure secure communication with Site-to-Site and Remote Access VPN. n Identity Awareness - Identify users, computers, and networks.
I will stick with D. I have R80.40 and Threat prevention blade is separate from Access Control policy. So any answer with Threat Prevention is out. A has endpoint policy which falls under Threat Prevention.
Please refer to this link. Introducing the Unified Access Control Policy from R80.10 Admin Guide https://sc1.checkpoint.com/documents/R80.10/WebAdminGuides/EN/CP_R80.10_NexGenSecurityGateway_Guide/html_frameset.htm Firewall App control & URL filtering Content Awareness IPSec VPN and Mobile Access Identity Awareness
To me, since the question is quite global, I would also chose B. However, Access Control Policy and Threat prevention policy also in themselves are unified policies, since they already encompass in their respective rule bases a group of security aspects. As in the CCSA book (page 129): "The unified Access Control policy is both data and application ware. It unifies the Firewall, NAT, Application Control and URL Filtering [...]" "The Threat Prevention policy unifies the IPS, Antivirus, Anti-Bot and Threat Emulation software Blade policies [...]." The reference to those 4 policy packages of answer B: https://sc1.checkpoint.com/documents/R80/CP_R80_SecMGMT/html_frameset.htm?topic=documents/R80/CP_R80_SecMGMT/119225
B is correct
(D is not correct, VPN is already part of access control policy)
Answer c In R80 the Access Control policy unifies the policies of these pre-R80 Software Blades: ✑ Firewall and VPN ✑ Application Control and URL Filtering ✑ Identity Awareness ✑ Data Awareness ✑ Mobile Access ✑ Security Zones Reference: https://sc1.checkpoint.com/documents/R80/CP_R80_SecMGMT/html_frameset.htm?topic=documents/R80/ CP_R80_SecMGMT/126197&anchor=o129934
I suppose technically speaking, none are entirely correct but taken as a whole, I'm going with "C".
It's C. Access Control Policy didn't exist until R80, before it was a Firewall Policy. So..... a Unified Access Control Policy can't Unify/Combine it's self. It's a trick Question!
look for Working with policy packages. https://sc1.checkpoint.com/documents/R80/CP_R80_SecMGMT/html_frameset.htm?topic=documents/R80/CP_R80_SecMGMT/126197&anchor=o129934
Can some one help me with correct answer I am so confused now which is the correct answer D or B
Correct Answer is B Security Administration Student Manual, R80 edition, p 64