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Safeguard Remote Access Hosted - Administration Guide

Introduction Prerequisites Limitations Getting started Administrator-side use cases User-side use cases Appendix Glossary

Configuring connections

This section describes how to configure connections.

NOTE:

When configuring HTTP or SSH connections, avoid using the IP address configured for administrator or user login on SPS.

To configure connections

  1. Select the type of connection from the main menu.

    • To configure an HTTP connection, select HTTP Control > Connections.

    • To configure an ICA connection, select ICA Control > Connections.

    • To configure a Remote Desktop connection, select RDP Control > Connections.

    • To configure a Secure Shell connection, select SSH Control > Connections.

    • To configure a Telnet connection, select Telnet Control > Connections.

    • To configure a VNC connection, select VNC Control > Connections.

  2. Click to define a new connection and enter a name that identifies the connection (for example, admin_mainserver).

    TIP: Use descriptive names that give information about the connection, for example, refer to the name of the accessible server, the allowed clients, and so on.

    Figure 40: <Protocol name> Control > Connections — Configuring connections

  3. In the From field, enter the IP address of the client that is permitted to access the server. To list additional clients, click .

    You can use an IPv4 or an IPv6 address. To limit the IP range to the specified address, set the prefix to 32 (IPv4) or 128 (IPv6).

    Alternatively, you can enter a hostname instead. SPS automatically resolves the hostname to an IP address.

    NOTE: Note the following limitations:

    • To resolve the hostnames, SPS uses the Domain Name Servers set in the Basic Settings > Network > Naming > Primary DNS server and Secondary DNS server fields.

    • If the Domain Name Server returns multiple IP addresses, SPS randomly selects from the list.

  4. In the To field, enter the IP address that the clients request.

    You can use an IPv4 or an IPv6 address. To limit the IP range to the specified address, set the prefix to 32 (IPv4) or 128 (IPv6).

    Alternatively, you can enter a hostname instead. SPS automatically resolves the hostname to an IP address.

    NOTE: Note the following limitations:

    • To resolve the hostnames, SPS uses the Domain Name Servers set in the Basic Settings > Network > Naming > Primary DNS server and Secondary DNS server fields.

    • If the Domain Name Server returns multiple IP addresses, SPS randomly selects from the list.

    • In non-transparent mode, enter the IP address of an SPS logical interface.

    • In transparent mode, enter the IP address of the protected server.

    To add additional IP addresses, click .

  5. If the clients use a custom port to address the server instead of the default port of the protocol, in the Port field, enter the port number that the clients request. To list additional port numbers, click .

    NOTE: SPS can handle a maximum of 15 unique ports per connection policy. If you want to add more than 15 custom ports, create additional connection policies.

  6. Non-transparent mode: In the Target field, enter the IP address and port number of the target server. SPS connects all incoming client-side connections to this server.

    Figure 41: <Protocol name> Control > Connections — Configuring non-transparent connections

  7. If needed, configure advanced settings (for example, network address translation, channel policy, gateway authentication, various policies, or other settings).

  8. To save the connection, click Commit.

    TIP: To temporarily disable a connection, deselect the checkbox of the connection.

  9. If needed, reorder the list of the connection policies. You can move connection policies by clicking the and buttons.

    SPS compares the connection policies to the parameters of the connection request one-by-one, starting with the first policy in the policy list. SPS applies to the connection the first connection policy that completely matches the connection request.

  10. Depending on your needs and on your environment, you can configure the following settings for your connections:

    • Modify the destination or source addresses of the connections.

    • Select a Backup Policy and an Archiving Policy for the audit trails and indexes of the connection.

      If you have indexed trails, the index is archived every 30 days.

      Caution:

      Hazard of data loss! Make sure you also back up your data besides archiving it.

      If a system crash occurs, you can lose up to 30 days of index, since the index is only archived every 30 days.

      NOTE: The backup and archive policies set for the connection apply only to the audit trails and indexes of the connection. General data about the connections that is displayed on the Search page is archived and backed up as part of the system-backup process of SPS.

    • To timestamp, encrypt, or sign the audit trails, configure an Audit Policy to suit your needs.

      Caution:

      In RDP connections, if the client uses the Windows login screen to authenticate on the server, the password of the client is visible in the audit trail. To avoid displaying the password when replaying the audit trail, encrypt the upstream traffic in the audit trail using a separate certificate from the downstream traffic.

    • Require the users to authenticate themselves not only on the target server, but on SPS as well.

    • Require four-eyes authorization on the connections, with the possibility of an auditor monitoring the connection in real-time.

    • In the case of certain connections and scenarios (for example SSH authentication, gateway authentication, Network Level Authentication (NLA) connections), SPS can authenticate you to an LDAP database, or retrieve your group memberships. To use these features, select an LDAP Server.

      NOTE: To display the usergroups that can access a specific Connection Policy, open the Connection Policy, then on the Connections page, select Show connection permissions > Show.

    • To limit the number of new connection requests accepted from a single client IP address per minute, in the Connection rate limit field, enter the maximum number of accepted connections.

    • If you have joined an SPP appliance to SPS and want to share specific SPS functions with SPP, use the Functions shared with SPP option.

      To share an RDP or an SSH connection policy with SPP to initiate sessions, select Share connection policy with SPP.

  11. If your clients and servers support it, configure the connection to use strong encryption.

  12. For graphical connections, adjust the settings of your servers for optimal performance:

    • Caution:

      For optimal performance and text recognition in graphical protocols, disable antialiasing on your servers. Antialiased text in the audit trails of RDP, VNC, and X11 connections is not recognized by the OCR engine of the Audit Player. The indexer service recognizes antialiased text, but its accuracy depends on the exact antialiasing settings. To properly index the trails of these connections, disable antialiasing.

      Note that by default, antialiasing is enabled on Windows Vista and later versions. Antialiasing is also called font smoothing. To optimize performance, disable ClearType, which is an antialiasing technology used on Microsoft Windows.

    • When processing RDP connections, SPS attempts to extract the username from the connection.

HTTPS proxy

The HTTPS proxy settings must be configured if your company policies do not allow devices to connect directly to the web. Once configured, SPS uses the configured proxy server for outbound web requests to external integrated services, such as Join to Starling or SPS plugins.

Figure 42: Basic Settings > Network > HTTPS proxy

  • Proxy server: The IP address or DNS name of the proxy server.

  • Port: The IP address or DNS name of the proxy server.

    NOTE:

    If different ports are specified in the Proxy server and the Port field, the Port field takes precedence.

  • Username: The user name used to connect to the proxy server.

    NOTE:

    The username and password are only required if your proxy server requires them to be specified.

  • Password: The password required to connect to the proxy server.

    NOTE:

    The username and password are only required if your proxy server requires them to be specified.

Joining SPS to One Identity Starling

This section describes how to use SPS with One Identity Starling and how to take advantage of companion features from Starling products, such as Two-Factor Authentication (2FA) and Identity Analytics.

Prerequisites
  • An existing Starling organization (tenant).

    NOTE: Consider the following:

    • If you have several Starling organizations, you can join your SPS to any of the existing organizations. However, ensure that you remember the Starling organization you joined to your SPS. This might be required if there is a join failure and you need to unjoin SPS from the respective Starling organization.

    • To use Starling with SPS, you need a Starling organization and account within a United States or a European Union data center. Note that if you want to use Starling 2FA, you must use a United States data center (European Union data center is not yet supported).

To join SPS to One Identity Starling

  1. Navigate to Basic Settings > Starling Integration.

    CAUTION: If SPS nodes are joined to a cluster, ensure that you initiate your Starling integration from the Central Management node.

  2. To check the availability of SPS and Starling, that is, if SPS can connect directly to the web and SPS can access Starling, click Check availability.

    • If your SPS cannot connect directly to the web, check your Internet connection and ensure that SPS can connect to the web, then re-initiate the process of joining your SPS to Starling. Ensure that SPS can access the following websites:

      • account.cloud.oneidentity.com

      • sts.cloud.oneidentity.com

      • accountsupervisor.cloud.oneidentity.com

      • oneidentitycloud.statuspage.io

      If your SPS is behind a web proxy, navigate to Basic Settings > Network > HTTPS Proxy and configure the proxy settings.

      NOTE: Currently, only built-in Certificate Authorities are supported. If the web proxy replaces the certificates of the Starling website on-the-fly, the join process might fail.

    • If SPS cannot access Starling, wait until Starling is available and re-initiate the process of joining your SPS to Starling.

    Figure 43: Basic Settings > Starling IntegrationSPS is ready to join Starling

    Starling ready to join

  3. When SPS is ready to join Starling, click Start join.

    The One Identity Starling site will open on a new tab.

    NOTE: Once you click Start join, you cannot stop the process and your SPS machine will be joined to Starling. Ensure that you continue with the join process, and once the join process is complete, if required, you can unjoin SPS from Starling.

  4. To allow SPS to access your Starling organization and the services that you have subscribed to, click Allow.

    The Join to Starling screen is displayed.

    Figure 44: Basic Settings > Starling Integration — Example of SPS joined to Starling

    SPS joined to Starling

Result

Your SPS instance is joined to Starling.

Starling integration

One Identity Starling helps to combine products from the One Identity line to create a secure and customizable cloud service. For more information, see the Starling technical documentation.

If you are using a Starling 2FA plugin, (that is, you have uploaded it to Basic Settings > Plugins and then configured it at Policies > AA Plugin Configurations) and the SPS node is joined to One Identity Starling, you do not have to specify api_key and api_url in the Starling 2FA plugin configuration. This configuration method is more secure.

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