Fortinet black logo

Administration Guide

Fail-to-wire for power loss/reboots

Fail-to-wire for power loss/reboots

If your appliance’s hardware model, network cabling, and configuration supports it, you can configure fail-to-wire/bypass behavior. This allows traffic to pass through unfiltered between 2 ports (a link pair) while the FortiWeb appliance is shut down, rebooting, or has unexpectedly lost power such as due to being accidentally unplugged or PSU failure.

Fail-to-wire may be useful if you are required by contract to provide uninterrupted connectivity, or if you consider connectivity interruption to be a greater risk than being open to attack during the power interruption.

Fail-to-wire is supported only:

  • When the operation mode is True Transparent Proxy, Transparent Inspection, or WCCP.
  • In standalone mode (not HA).
  • For a bridge (V-zone) between ports wired to a CP7 processor or other hardware which provides support for fail-to-wire:

    • FortiWeb 600D: port1 + port2
    • FortiWeb1000C: port3 + port4
    • FortiWeb 1000D: port3 + port4 or port5 + port6
    • FortiWeb 1000E: port3 + port4 + port5 + port6
    • FortiWeb 2000E: port1 + port2 or port3 + port4
    • FortiWeb3000C/D: port5 + port6
    • FortiWeb3000E/4000E: port9 + port10, port11 + port12, port13 + port14, or port15 + port16
    • FortiWeb 3010E: port3 + port4, port9 + port10, port11 + port12, port13 + port14 or port15 + port16
    • FortiWeb4000C/D: port5 + port6 or port7 + port8
    • FortiWeb3000CFsx/DFsx: port5 + port6 or port7 + port8

FortiWeb-400B/400C, FortiWeb HA clusters, and ports not wired to a CP7/fail-open chip do not support fail-to-wire.

In the case of HA, don’t use fail-open—instead, use a standby HA appliance to provide full fault tolerance.

Bypass results in degraded security while FortiWeb is shut down, and therefore HA is usually a better solution: it ensures that degraded security does not occur if one of the appliances is shut down. If it is possible that both of your FortiWeb HA appliances could simultaneously lose power, you can add an external bypass device such as FortiBridge (http://docs.fortinet.com/fortibridge).

tooltip icon

When FortiWeb works in True Transparent Proxy mode and the HA feature is enabled, it's recommended to disable STP on the front or back-end switch if you prefer uninterrupted connectivity, because STP convergence usually takes 30 to 60 seconds in case of HA failover.

Aside from the usual network topology requirements for the transparent operation modes, there are no special requirements for fail-to-wire. During setup, after setting the operation mode, you will simply go to System > Network > Fail-open and select either:

  • PowerOff-Bypass—Behave as a wire when the FortiWeb appliance is powered off, allowing connections to pass directly through from one port to the other, bypassing all policy scans and modifications.
  • PowerOff-Cutoff—Interrupt connectivity when the FortiWeb appliance is powered off. Bypass is disabled. This is the default.
See also

Fail-to-wire for power loss/reboots

Fail-to-wire for power loss/reboots

If your appliance’s hardware model, network cabling, and configuration supports it, you can configure fail-to-wire/bypass behavior. This allows traffic to pass through unfiltered between 2 ports (a link pair) while the FortiWeb appliance is shut down, rebooting, or has unexpectedly lost power such as due to being accidentally unplugged or PSU failure.

Fail-to-wire may be useful if you are required by contract to provide uninterrupted connectivity, or if you consider connectivity interruption to be a greater risk than being open to attack during the power interruption.

Fail-to-wire is supported only:

  • When the operation mode is True Transparent Proxy, Transparent Inspection, or WCCP.
  • In standalone mode (not HA).
  • For a bridge (V-zone) between ports wired to a CP7 processor or other hardware which provides support for fail-to-wire:

    • FortiWeb 600D: port1 + port2
    • FortiWeb1000C: port3 + port4
    • FortiWeb 1000D: port3 + port4 or port5 + port6
    • FortiWeb 1000E: port3 + port4 + port5 + port6
    • FortiWeb 2000E: port1 + port2 or port3 + port4
    • FortiWeb3000C/D: port5 + port6
    • FortiWeb3000E/4000E: port9 + port10, port11 + port12, port13 + port14, or port15 + port16
    • FortiWeb 3010E: port3 + port4, port9 + port10, port11 + port12, port13 + port14 or port15 + port16
    • FortiWeb4000C/D: port5 + port6 or port7 + port8
    • FortiWeb3000CFsx/DFsx: port5 + port6 or port7 + port8

FortiWeb-400B/400C, FortiWeb HA clusters, and ports not wired to a CP7/fail-open chip do not support fail-to-wire.

In the case of HA, don’t use fail-open—instead, use a standby HA appliance to provide full fault tolerance.

Bypass results in degraded security while FortiWeb is shut down, and therefore HA is usually a better solution: it ensures that degraded security does not occur if one of the appliances is shut down. If it is possible that both of your FortiWeb HA appliances could simultaneously lose power, you can add an external bypass device such as FortiBridge (http://docs.fortinet.com/fortibridge).

tooltip icon

When FortiWeb works in True Transparent Proxy mode and the HA feature is enabled, it's recommended to disable STP on the front or back-end switch if you prefer uninterrupted connectivity, because STP convergence usually takes 30 to 60 seconds in case of HA failover.

Aside from the usual network topology requirements for the transparent operation modes, there are no special requirements for fail-to-wire. During setup, after setting the operation mode, you will simply go to System > Network > Fail-open and select either:

  • PowerOff-Bypass—Behave as a wire when the FortiWeb appliance is powered off, allowing connections to pass directly through from one port to the other, bypassing all policy scans and modifications.
  • PowerOff-Cutoff—Interrupt connectivity when the FortiWeb appliance is powered off. Bypass is disabled. This is the default.
See also