I try to solve a (maybe) edge case for a customer:
The Customer has multiple Website behind a Fortigate which he would like to make public available:
There is only 1 public IP Address. All the Website should be available on Port 443 (HTTPS).
The Websites should be protected by WAF.
What I have tried:
I can make the first two Websites (web1, web2) available with "Virtual Servers" and by using a Wildcard (public signed) certificate. Then I used a Firewall Rule with a Web Application Firewall Profile to secure the Servers. But then web3 cannot be added because it is using a different Domain.
I also tried it with ZTNA, Proxy Policy and by disabling the Client Certificate requirement by setting "set client-cert disable". This way I was able to publish all of the 3 Domains. But that way i cannot use any protection as Web Application Firewall cannot be used together with ZTNA as far as i know.
Also, i noticed, that when using a HTTPS-Real-Server, that the real certificate of the Server is showing up instead the certificate i selected in the ZTNA-Real-Server assignment.
Any suggestion how to solve this case without using a FortiWeb?
Regards,
Michael
Solved! Go to Solution.
For everyone else looking for a solution, I solved this by creating a Multidomain Wildcard SAN Certificate.
With that, it is possible to use the Virtual Server and WAF for all Domains.
First i didn‘t want to use a Certificate like that, because they are expensive.
I‘m now using the Powershell Module „Posh-Acme“ together with the integrated Cloudflare Plugin in the Module to automatically generate a Multidomain Wildcard SAN Certificate. The Renewal Process is also automated.
After generating/renewing, I use the PowerShell Module „Posh-SSH“ to connect to the Fortigate and Upload the Certificate via a TFTP-Server (pfx file). Then I can use native Fortigate Commands, also with Posh-SSH, to assign the Certificate to all Services (everything automated).
Initialy i thought that would not be suiteable for production, but it was so easy to crate a script with the two PowerShell modules, and the Certificate can be monitored by PRTG, so I get an alert if something failes.
I tried to do the same.. If you don't use a dedicated WAF, I think your solution with FortiGate is to use a second public IP for web3.
Thanks AEK. I hoped that there will be some "magic" I had missed, but doesn't seem so.
For everyone else looking for a solution, I solved this by creating a Multidomain Wildcard SAN Certificate.
With that, it is possible to use the Virtual Server and WAF for all Domains.
First i didn‘t want to use a Certificate like that, because they are expensive.
I‘m now using the Powershell Module „Posh-Acme“ together with the integrated Cloudflare Plugin in the Module to automatically generate a Multidomain Wildcard SAN Certificate. The Renewal Process is also automated.
After generating/renewing, I use the PowerShell Module „Posh-SSH“ to connect to the Fortigate and Upload the Certificate via a TFTP-Server (pfx file). Then I can use native Fortigate Commands, also with Posh-SSH, to assign the Certificate to all Services (everything automated).
Initialy i thought that would not be suiteable for production, but it was so easy to crate a script with the two PowerShell modules, and the Certificate can be monitored by PRTG, so I get an alert if something failes.
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