FortiGate-VM FortiADC-VM FortiAnalyzer-VM FortiAuthenticator-VM FortiCache-VM FortiRecorder-VM. FortiGate® Virtual Appliances Consolidated Security for Virtualized Environments Complete end-to-end security ecosystem for the Software Defined Data Center. Fortinet enables. Unlimited User License Yes Yes Yes Yes System Performance.
Btw, the quickstart brochure that comes with the router has the a space between 'factory' and 'reset':, do you suppose that is deliberate for some reason? I could not log into the GUI because the previous administration had apparently changed the router IP so 192.168.1.99 wasn't giving me anything. Now I can use the GUI, but I guess I will have to move it to a standalone workstation because the management computer apparently has to be 192.168.1.2, is that right? Man, what a hassle. Windows workstations don't ship with hyperterm anymore, so I had to move it to one of our Linux servers to do the reset, but the Linux host is a file/database/mail server so I can't just change IPs. So now, back to the Win7 workstation for GUI. Pain in the hindquarters.
I won't be able to test this until tomorrow, but is it true that the management computer has to be 192.168.1.2? What if I change the Fortinet's management IP to be something accessible on our LAN with: config system settings set manageip end I suppose I'd also have to configure the Fortinet to be in the same subnet: config system interface edit internal set ip end Please advise. If you think this should be a new question, no problem, I'll repose. 'but is it true that the management computer has to be 192.168.1.2' not by default no, but the previous guy might have put in a rule that says 'only dot 2 can access the management website' there are lots of free alternatives to hyperterm changing the management ip would also be a good thing to do yes you can instead add an additional ip address to your network card in your workstation, just give it 192.168.1.2 / 255.255.255.0, no gateway needed. That adds the routes so you can talk to 192.168.1.x.