Created on 06-21-2024 12:12 AM Edited on 10-08-2024 04:45 AM By Jean-Philippe_P
Dear all.
After upgrading to version 7.4.4 we experience massive performance and handling issues. Can anyone of you confirm this?
What I can see among other things are the following facts:
I really love my Fortigate and the Fortinet infrastructure like you can see in my nickname :) I really do. But this update is really really bad to be honest. Do you experience the same? I am really sure we will rollback to 7.4.0 in the next days. 7.4.4 is quiet impossible to use in comparison to 7.4.4... And why are address groups an address lists now separated? Why?! :D Come on guys from fortinet. Who made this decisions? Can you not just add an option to switch between the old and new GUI so that customers can choose on their own what to use? In my personal opinion this is not a good update for real hugh environments like we have with thousands of entries...
I think I will find more "not so well" changes. But probably not because I think first off all the best idea is to rollback.
With kindest Regards a not so happy FortiLover after updating :(
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Dear all.
Together with the german support team we have figgured out why we had so much trouble after updating to 7.4.4. We have still an old Hardware Revision of the Fortigate 100F which has only 4GB of RAM. Newer Hardware revision has already 8GB RAM. That RAM is quite always full so that it comes to massive performance issues (conserved mode). It seems so that in our configuration we use so much features that this model or 4GB RAM in total is not enough. It is the IPSengine to be more precise. That engine processes will be used not only by IPS checks. It is used for SSL inspections as well and so on... Like I said... with our amount of used features and connected devices it is not enough RAM.
Personally I ask myself why Fortinet is so "thrifty" (no affront) in its Hardware designs when it comes to RAM. To be honest... It is 2024 :) The use of 4GB modules is probably not really uptodate in nowerdays. But hey :) I would wish that the minimum of every Fortigate is at least 16GB of RAM or more. When I check the prices for RAM modules it does not make really differences between 4GB and 16GB RAM modules. And I think customers would be happy to have a device that is future-proof... only because of the RAM as newer versions with more features really consumes more memory. And if I have to pay 50 Euros more for more RAM... I would be happy. It is a difference to upgrade RAM compared to buy a new 400F with a 5 year support contract and EP bundle.
So I just wanted to give a feedback. The question is solved hereby. We need a bigger Hardware for our needs. Looking for a 400F model I think as it has 16GB RAM. Hopefully future-proof. You can see it here. This comparision is really handy dandy. Hardware comparison for Fortigate models
If I could I would like to configure the hardware before buying. But it is the way it is :) You want just more RAM although your CPU is sleeping all the time. Then buy a more powerful hardware... that seems to be the only good solution for now. The 400F model is not that cheap compared to our 100F. I would say the 100F is enough for us when I could increase the RAM... But this seems not the way Fortinet would like to have it :) So we probably buy the 400F or 401F.
With kindest regards
FortiLover
Created on 10-08-2024 03:05 AM Edited on 10-08-2024 03:08 AM
We have updated the firewall to 7.4.5 like suggested from @Pittstate and additional to this we have installed/configured FortiAnalyzer and disabled the option on the firewall to write logs into memory. After a restart of the firewall we can confirm that the RAM usage so far is not that high that the conserved mode is triggered (works now for round about 2 weeks). But it is important to restart the firewall after the configuration as the logs seem to stay parked in the memory. Now we see a usage of 60%-75% with FortiGate 100F (1st hardware revision with 4GB RAM). It is still not really enough RAM but for us it is a temporary solution until we have a better model. Probably we do not need to update to a Fortigate 4xx series model. We probably just need the 2nd hardware revision of our Firewall.
Hi FortiLover
I went through the 7.4.4's known issues and didn't find the bugs you described above, this should mean that you may have discovered new issues in this version. I think if you report these bugs by opening a ticket, Fortinet will handle this issues seriously and correct them in future patches.
On the other hand 7.4.0 seems to be a very nice version with nice new features but it is very new and it has not yet reached maturity. So you may already know that you should not install 7.4.x (from 7.4.0 to 7.4.4) in critical production environment, you should rather install the recommended version: 7.2.8, which is stable and vulnerability free (so far).
Running 7.4.4 on a new install of 1800F in HA. I see no major issues with performance on 7.4.4. It's not without its behavioral issues, so if you're coming from an earlier version, you will see some changes. Most of the issues I've had are moving from a stand alone (on 7.0.14) to an HA config and some of the nuances there. I've also encountered a behavioral change in how the FG handles timeouts with remote/ldap authentications. I also realize that I'm making a two version jump to the bleeding edge, so I accept the risks that come with the territory.
I did notice the sorting issue mentioned in your point #1, and as for #2 you can always filter your search instead of scrolling the gui. If you have thousands of entries, filtering would seem more efficient anyway. I do that and I only have several hundred entries because I don't want to scroll. But these are minor QoL issues and will be fixed as 7.4 matures.
Regarding your point #7 and #8, they have disabled web mode by default in new installs. They also tell you to disable it in the 7.4.4 administrator's guide sslvpn security best practices section.
Based on what you've written it looks like you've migrated into the 7.4 series and so these features will be enabled and you'll get warnings. To me, it looks like Fortinet is moving away from sslvpn type connections and trying to move people towards certificate based IPSEC or ZTNA policy. A skeptic would say this is for financial purposes, getting people to license their other products. But nearly all the major exploits against a FG in the last few years have involved the sslvpn component. All the major security vendors have had their sslvpns exploited in some fashion in the last year. So, it makes sense for them to try to limit the attack surface.
Why don't they just disable it? Because people who had it configured would complain that it suddenly stopped working. So instead they give you a warning message and nudge you to start migrating away from it. Also, I'd imagine Fortinet would disable it if they could as sslvpn has been a major thorn in their side for at least the last 3 years from major security exploit perspective. All of the emergency maintenance patches I've performed have been because of an sslvpn exploit of some kind.
Dear all.
Together with the german support team we have figgured out why we had so much trouble after updating to 7.4.4. We have still an old Hardware Revision of the Fortigate 100F which has only 4GB of RAM. Newer Hardware revision has already 8GB RAM. That RAM is quite always full so that it comes to massive performance issues (conserved mode). It seems so that in our configuration we use so much features that this model or 4GB RAM in total is not enough. It is the IPSengine to be more precise. That engine processes will be used not only by IPS checks. It is used for SSL inspections as well and so on... Like I said... with our amount of used features and connected devices it is not enough RAM.
Personally I ask myself why Fortinet is so "thrifty" (no affront) in its Hardware designs when it comes to RAM. To be honest... It is 2024 :) The use of 4GB modules is probably not really uptodate in nowerdays. But hey :) I would wish that the minimum of every Fortigate is at least 16GB of RAM or more. When I check the prices for RAM modules it does not make really differences between 4GB and 16GB RAM modules. And I think customers would be happy to have a device that is future-proof... only because of the RAM as newer versions with more features really consumes more memory. And if I have to pay 50 Euros more for more RAM... I would be happy. It is a difference to upgrade RAM compared to buy a new 400F with a 5 year support contract and EP bundle.
So I just wanted to give a feedback. The question is solved hereby. We need a bigger Hardware for our needs. Looking for a 400F model I think as it has 16GB RAM. Hopefully future-proof. You can see it here. This comparision is really handy dandy. Hardware comparison for Fortigate models
If I could I would like to configure the hardware before buying. But it is the way it is :) You want just more RAM although your CPU is sleeping all the time. Then buy a more powerful hardware... that seems to be the only good solution for now. The 400F model is not that cheap compared to our 100F. I would say the 100F is enough for us when I could increase the RAM... But this seems not the way Fortinet would like to have it :) So we probably buy the 400F or 401F.
With kindest regards
FortiLover
Just a hint on memory: the memory chips used are usually not the regular PC modules that are fine-tuned for speed and low latency. On top of that, the memory chips on firewalls are also designed with reliability in mind, and different read/write patterns. That's what makes them more expensive than the memory chips you find on the market
I understand that. And still I think that those modules will not be that expensive. To be honest. It is still a difference if I would have the choice to pay, let's say 300-500€ more for an RAM upgrade instead of buying a new 401F with EP or UTP bundle for the next 5 years you know?. But I understand your point and this is fully correct.
By the way. When checking teared down Fortigates like this one - it is a 3200D model - I think I can see just "normal" DDR4 ECC registered RAMs with clockspeed of 2133MHz. I can imagine that on lowrange models and midrange models they use different kinds of RAM... But in the enterprise section it seems that this is "just normal server hardware" which is not really expensive :) At least not too expensive...
Created on 09-18-2024 04:30 AM Edited on 09-18-2024 04:30 AM
Hi FortiLover
Did you try to extend the RAM? I'm curious to know if it actually works.
Hi AEK :)
To be honest. The Fortinet guys we talked to did not really recommended that way :) They were not only sales guys to be serious. They were real professionals. All in all we came to the conclusion, that it makes sense (for the future as well) to buy a bigger version of the fortigate... We have not really a small company here :) And Hardware revision 1 is not state of the art anymore... But i played with that idea :) But did not do it. I think in our case it is a good deal to buy another setup and use the 100F for something else :) But I was so interested that I would really like to try to upgrade on my own 0_o
Even though not recommended - really curious to find out what happens :D
So in case you decide not to sell the unit and do a memory swap, keep us posted ;)
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