F5 Networks offers the F5 BIG-IP Advanced Firewall Manager, a firewall software combining a number of features including DDoS, DNS security, and other protections.
N/A
NETSCOUT Arbor DDoS Protection
Score 10.0 out of 10
N/A
NETSCOUT Arbor DDoS Protection security software offers protection across multiple layers of the OSI model. It provides security measures for Layer 2 (Data Link layer) through Layer 7 (Application layer), ensuring complete protection for network infrastructure.
N/A
Pricing
F5 BIG-IP Advanced Firewall Manager (AFM)
NETSCOUT Arbor DDoS Protection
Editions & Modules
No answers on this topic
No answers on this topic
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
F5 BIG-IP Advanced Firewall Manager (AFM)
NETSCOUT Arbor DDoS Protection
Free Trial
No
No
Free/Freemium Version
No
No
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
No setup fee
No setup fee
Additional Details
—
—
More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
F5 BIG-IP Advanced Firewall Manager (AFM)
NETSCOUT Arbor DDoS Protection
Features
F5 BIG-IP Advanced Firewall Manager (AFM)
NETSCOUT Arbor DDoS Protection
Firewall
Comparison of Firewall features of Product A and Product B
F5 BIG-IP Advanced Firewall Manager (AFM)
8.6
2 Ratings
0% below category average
NETSCOUT Arbor DDoS Protection
-
Ratings
Identification Technologies
8.02 Ratings
00 Ratings
Visualization Tools
7.02 Ratings
00 Ratings
Content Inspection
9.02 Ratings
00 Ratings
Policy-based Controls
8.02 Ratings
00 Ratings
Active Directory and LDAP
10.01 Ratings
00 Ratings
Firewall Management Console
7.02 Ratings
00 Ratings
Reporting and Logging
8.02 Ratings
00 Ratings
VPN
10.01 Ratings
00 Ratings
High Availability
9.02 Ratings
00 Ratings
Stateful Inspection
9.02 Ratings
00 Ratings
Proxy Server
10.01 Ratings
00 Ratings
Best Alternatives
F5 BIG-IP Advanced Firewall Manager (AFM)
NETSCOUT Arbor DDoS Protection
Small Businesses
pfSense
Score 9.9 out of 10
Cloudflare
Score 8.7 out of 10
Medium-sized Companies
Quantum Firewalls and Security Gateways
Score 9.6 out of 10
Cloudflare
Score 8.7 out of 10
Enterprises
Palo Alto Networks Virtualized Next-Generation Firewalls - VM Series
We were able to eliminate a firewall from our network architecture by integrating the module into our existing F5 BIG-IP Advanced Firewall Manager (AFM). This allowed us to save on tech refresh costs, since the F5 was able to handle the module without much additional strain on the device. However, if a firewall had features that the AFM lacked, then using that firewall in tandem with an F5 would be preferable.
Arbor has the propensity to deal with even the larger firms. I have been using it for a year span and I don’t have any such complaint which is affecting us in a bad way. I can recommend this to all the companies who want to have a good network behavior analysis and to monitor the problems if there is any chance of it to occur and which has the potential to affect the whole working environment of the company.
Arbor's layer 7 countermeasures are very good out of the box, but it is very easy to reconfigure values and see the impact in real-time.
Peakflow SP provides fairly detailed traffic analysis and breakdown for top-N data such as top talkers, top ASNs, top ports and so on. They offer "SP Insight" as a product to build in more powerful reporting on the already-collected metrics with an interface very similar to Kibana or one of its many forks. We are not licensed for that so I can't speak to its capabilities.
Arbor allows for a good amount of automation. Fast flood detection ensures that if pre-determined thresholds are quickly exceeded, preconfigured mitigations can be started or in the event of an extremely large volumetric attack you can trigger an Arbor Cloud (sold separately) mitigation or a remotely-triggered blackhole announcement to drop traffic to the attacked destination IP address(es) upstream.
ATAC (Arbor support) is very helpful. The level of support our organization maintains covers ATAC performing all update functions to all Arbor appliances - SP and TMS.
Arbor is a highly expensive company. this was the major reason behind not going for the Arbor sightline in the first place. Although its features are good but the cost is unjustifiable.
The implementation and the understanding of this tool are full of complexity and perplexity.
I am looking forward to having a new update on it. They used to update their versions quite frequently but it's been a long time they haven’t updated or maybe it is not in their priority lists right now.
F5 Advanced Firewall Manager has been a solid, strong solution to both keep our systems safe and being seamless for our end users. Most of the time, the end-user is not impacted and does not even know F5 Advanced Firewall Manager is running which is exactly what we are looking for.
Both F5 [BIG-IP Advanced Firewall Manager] and Radware require training as they are not easy to use. But Radware uses some configuration that needs deep learning and proper labs. From an admin's perspective, Configuration and management for F5 [BIG-IP Advanced Firewall Manager are] less. Also, the cost of implementing F5 [BIG-IP Advanced Firewall Manager] is lesser than that of Radware Alteon.
We evaluated Corero and a number of external scrubbing services. In the POC, we found Corero's mitigation capabilities to extremely limited beyond blocking common traffic types at preconfigured rates. It's not impossible to configure custom mitigation methods and countermeasures, but it requires a deep understanding of BPF and bytecode, where Arbor is checkboxes, radio buttons, and dialog buttons that all sit next to a graph showing traffic dropped and permitted by the current settings. I'm not going to enumerate each of the cloud services evaluated because the decision came down to the same reasoning. The amount of traffic we receive is enough that it would be prohibitively expensive for our use case.