Comments
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To my knowledge, you cannot do this on SonicWall firewalls.
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I'd recommend to check if you have any NAT policy for that 1443 port. Let us know your findings please.
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When you add a Syslog server, the default Event Profile is 0. If you set this to 1, and if you don't have any category/sub-category or event, that is configured for event profile 1, then the firewall will not trigger/create any syslog message. This is configured on the "Use This Syslog Server Profile" field, and by default…
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@shwazh , if you have created the CSR externally then you have two options. Loading only the intermediate and/or the root certificates will not work, since you created the CSR externally and hence the private key is unknown to the firewall. Keep in mind, certificates are based on private-public key encryption concept. PFX…
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Could you confirm the source of the CSR? Was it generated on the firewall, or was it created externally?
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I believe you are looking for port forwarding. If that is the case the following KB article should help you navigate with the implementation. Make sure your WAN to LAN Access Rule is locked to trusted public sources only. Otherwise, your server will be exposed to the wild public, which is not a good idea.…
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@Alvida you can use the following Syslog Messages Reference Document which has the details of each message, including event/message Id, event group, event name etc. There are also several syslog message examples which you may find helpful. https://www.sonicwall.com/techdocs/pdf/SonicOS-X_7.0.1_LogEvents_ReferenceGuide.pdf
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It is unfortunate that SonicWall firewalls do not support the ACME protocol, and I am not aware if this feature is on their product roadmap. However, I propose the following solution for managing certificates: Install CertBot on a Linux host. Run CertBot to generate or renew the certificate from Let's Encrypt. Convert the…