Clean Install of TOS Aurora/TufinOS 4.40 on a VMWare ESXi Machine

Overview

This procedure is for a clean installation of TOS Aurora with TufinOS 4.40 on a non-cloud virtual machine. Any existing data on the machine will be deleted.

Tufin Orchestration Suite (TOS Aurora) includes SecureTrack, SecureChange and SecureApp. You will specify the applications you want to enable, when you run the install command.

After the installation you will have created a single data node TOS cluster to which you can add additional worker nodes. There is no need to install TOS on any additional nodes. Worker nodes require an operating system only, and with high availability, data is replicated between the nodes.

Multi-Node Clusters

If your TOS Aurora deployment requires additional resources, after installing and setting up TOS you can add worker nodes to the cluster. See multi-node cluster.

High Availability (HA)

TOS Aurora can be set up to run as a high availability environment using three servers (nodes).

Distributed Deployment Using Remote Collectors

TOS Aurora can be set up to run as a distributed architecture using remote collectors (RC's).

The current procedure is meant for installing on both central and remote collector clusters. For more information, see remote collectors.

Prerequisites

General Requirements

  • This procedure must be performed by an experienced Linux administrator with knowledge of network configuration.

  • To ensure optimal performance and reliability, the required resources need to always be available for TOS. If resources become unavailable, this will affect TOS performance. Do not oversubscribe resources.

  • Verify that you have sufficient resources (CPUs, disk storage and main memory) to run TOS Aurora. The required resources are determined by the size of your system. See Sizing Calculation for a Clean Install.

  • You cannot use IP Tables with TOS Aurora. In addition, all IP Tables rules will be flushed when installing.

  • If you have made a previous unsuccessful attempt to install TOS Aurora, you must uninstall and reboot before reinstalling (see Uninstalling TOS)

  • The TOS installation removes all TOS files, directories and backups left on the machine from old deployments. If you have any files you want to keep, move them to a safe external location before starting this procedure.

  • Do not install any software on your server before or after the deployment of TOS Aurora that is not specified in the current procedure.

  • Once TOS Aurora has been installed, changing the host name or IP address will require reinstalling - see Changing IP Address/Host Names. If you want to change the host name of the node, do so before running the tos install command.

    If you need assistance, consult with your sales engineer or Tufin support.

  • If you have any external disks (for example, etcd), disconnect them. These disks should be reconnected after the TufinOS upgrade is complete.
  • The Virtual Machine Operating System guest family must be Linux, and the operating system guest version must be RHEL 8.x

VMware Requirements

  • Your ESX host must be running VMware ESXi 6.5, 6.7, 7.0 or 8.0 only. ESXi 8.0 requires TufinOS 4.20 or later
ESXi 6 is already EOL (end of life). ESXi 7 is planned to reach EOL in April 2025
  • Disks: Select a storage type of SSD. Take into consideration that TOS requires 7,500 IOPS and the throughput expected will average 250MB/s with bursts of up to 700MB/s.

Network Requirements

  • Tufin Orchestration Suite must only be installed in an appropriately secured network and physical location. Only authorized users should be granted access to TOS products and the operating system on the server.

  • You must allow access to required Ports and Services.

  • All TOS nodes need to be on the same subnet.

  • Network configurations for your interface must be set to manual IPv4 with gateway and DNS Servers set to the IPs used by your organization.

    The system will use a reverse DNS lookup (PTR record) to resolve the DNS IP addresses with the domain name during the TOS installation. Therefore you have to add these PTR records to the DNS server. If you do not, the TOS installation will fail.
  • Allocate a 24-bit CIDR subnet for the Kubernetes service network and a16-bit CIDR subnet for the Kubernetes pods network (10.244.0.0/16 is used by default).

    The pods and services networks must be inside the following private networks: 10.0.0.0/8, 172.16.0.0/12, 192.168.0.0/16. In addition, ensure that the dedicated CIDR for the service network and pods network don't overlap with each other, and:

    • The physical addresses of your TOS Aurora servers (see below)

    • Your primary VIP, Syslog VIP or external load balancer IP (see below)

    • Any other subnets communicating with TOS or with TOS nodes

  • If a proxy is configured on your system make sure this network is excluded.

  • You must have available the following dedicated IP addresses:

    • For on-premise deployments, a primary VIP that will serve as the external  IP address used to access TOS Aurora from your browser. The primary VIP will not be needed in the installation of the operating system, except in the final step - the installation command.
    • The physical network IP address of the first network interface used by the administrator for CLI commands. This is the IP address you will use in most steps of the procedure.
    • If additional nodes are subsequently added to the cluster, each node will require an additional dedicated physical network IP address.

    • Additional syslog VIPs can be allocated as needed.
    • The VIP, all node physical network IP addresses and all syslog VIPs must be on the first network interface.

    • Make sure your first physical interface is correctly configured and all other interfaces are not on the same network.

      To find the first network interface, run the following command:

      [<ADMIN> ~]$ sudo /opt/tufinos/scripts/network_interface_by_pci_order.sh | awk -F'=' '/NET_IFS\[0\]/ { print $NF }'
      sudo /opt/tufinos/scripts/network_interface_by_pci_order.sh | awk -F'=' '/NET_IFS\[0\]/ { print $NF }'

      Otherwise network errors such as connectivity failures and incorrect traffic routing might occur.

Downloads

  1. Download the TufinOS 4.40 installation package from the Download Center.

  2. Download the TOS R24-2 PHF1.1.0 installation package from the Download Center.

  3. The downloaded files are in .tgz format <FILENAME>.tgz.

  4. Extract the TufinOS image from its archive.

    [<ADMIN> ~]$ sudo tar xzvf <FILENAME>.tgz
    sudo tar xzvf <FILENAME>.tgz

    The run file name includes the release, version, build number, and type of installation.

    TufinOS ISO file example: TufinOS-4.40-4368238-x86_64-Final.iso

  5. Verify the integrity of the TufinOS installation package.

    [<ADMIN> ~]# sha256sum -c TufinOS-X.XX-XXXXXX-x86_64-Final.iso.sha256
    sha256sum -c TufinOS-X.XX-XXXXXX-x86_64-Final.iso.sha256

    The output should return OK

The Install Procedure

Before you proceed, read and understand Prerequisites to avoid risk of failure.

Install TufinOS 4.40

  1. Place the TufinOS ISO image file on the datastore of vSphere. For local installation on a VMware machine, locate the extracted ISO image file.

  2. Confirm that in your virtual machine settings, Boot Options is configured to use BIOS. If you are using EFI, the procedure will not work.

  3. Edit the properties of the virtual CD/DVD drive, and do one of the following:

    Using vSphere:

    • As Device Type select Datastore ISO file, and browse to the TufinOS ISO image.

    • Under Device Status, select Connect at power on.

    Using a workstation:

    • Under Device Status, select Connect at power on.

    • Under Connection, select Use ISO image file, and browse to the TufinOS ISO image.

  4. Set the VM to boot to BIOS configuration

  5. In BIOS > Boot, select CD-ROM Drive.

  6. In BIOS > Exit, select Exit Saving Changes. Click Yes.

  7. Save the settings.

  8. Restart the VM. TufinOS installation begins.
  9. Select TufinOS 4.40 Installation for TOS Aurora.

  10. When prompted, select Install TufinOS 4.40 for Data Node:

  11. When prompted, confirm and choose Yes.

  12. When the installation is complete, reboot the virtual machine.

  13. When BIOS launches, change the Boot option to Hard Drive.

  14. In BIOS > Exit, select Exit Saving Changes. Click Yes.

  15. Log in using the default admin user credentials:

    username: tufin-admin

    password: admin (you will be prompted to change this on first log in)

    IP address: assigned by DHCP

Set Up TufinOS

  1. If you want to reset the host name or IP of the machine, do so now. Once TOS Aurora has been installed, changing the host name or IP address will require reinstalling - see Changing IP Address/Host Names. To change the host name, use the command below, replacing <mynode> with your preferred name:

    [<ADMIN> ~]$ sudo hostnamectl set-hostname <mynode>
    sudo hostnamectl set-hostname <mynode>
  2. Configure the server timezone:

    [<ADMIN> ~]$ sudo timedatectl set-timezone <timezone>
    sudo timedatectl set-timezone <timezone>

    where <timezone> is in the format Area/Location. Examples: America/Jamaica, Hongkong, GMT, Europe/Prague.

    To view a list of the time-zone formats that can be used, run:

    [<ADMIN> ~]$ sudo timedatectl list-timezones
    sudo timedatectl list-timezones
  3. Synchronize your machine time with a trusted NTP server. Follow the steps in Configuring NTP Using Chrony. In an HA deployment, all servers need to be synchronized to the same time.

  4. Configure the IP address and DNS, where <Interface Name> is the name of the interface you are using (for example, ens32). If you have several network interfaces, configure the first one.

  5. To assign a static IP address:

    1. Run the command:

    2. [<ADMIN> ~]$ sudo nmtui edit <Interface Name>
      sudo nmtui edit <Interface Name>

      and set the following parameters in the window:

      • Set IPv4 CONFIGURATION to Manual
      • Set Addresses for the physical IP, together with the chosen subnet
      • Set Gateway and DNS Servers to the IPs used by your organization
    3. Restart the network service.
    4. [<ADMIN> ~]$ sudo systemctl restart NetworkManager.service
      sudo systemctl restart NetworkManager.service

Mount The etcd Database to A Separate Disk

The etcd database should be on a separate disk to improve the stability of TOS Aurora and reduce latency. Moving the etcd database to a separate disk ensures that the kubernetes database has access to all the resources required to ensure an optimal TOS performance.

See Move etcd - New Non-Cloud VM.

Install TOS Aurora

  1. If you wish to configure NIC bonding, you must do it before installing TOS Aurora. See Link Redundancy on Tufin Appliances.

  2. Run the tmux command:

    [<ADMIN> ~]$ tmux new-session -s TOS-Install
    tmux new-session -s TOS-Install
  3. On the target machine, create the directory /opt/misc/, if it does not exist already.

  4. Transfer the run file (already downloaded) to the /opt/misc/ directory.

  5. Go to /opt/misc/

  6. Verify the integrity of the TOS installation packages by entering the following commands and comparing the output with the checksum information.

  7. [<ADMIN> ~]$ sha256sum tos-xxxx-xxxxxxxx-final-xxxx.run.tgz
    sha256sum tos-xxxx-xxxxxxxx-final-xxxx.run.tgz
    [<ADMIN> ~]$ sha1sum tos-xxxx-xxxxxxxx-final-xxxx.run.tgz
    sha1sum tos-xxxx-xxxxxxxx-final-xxxx.run.tgz
  8. Extract the TOS run file from its archive.

    [<ADMIN> ~]$ tar -xvzf tos-xxxx-xxxxxxxx-final-xxxx.run.tgz
    tar -xvzf tos-xxxx-xxxxxxxx-final-xxxx.run.tgz
  9. The run file name includes the release, version, and build number.

    TOS file example: R24-2-pga0.0-final-4577.run

  10. Run the TOS Aurora run file.

    [<ADMIN> ~]$ cd /opt/misc/
    cd /opt/misc/
    [<ADMIN> ~]$ sudo sh <runfile>
    sudo sh <runfile>
  11. Run the install command, replacing the parameters:

    • <PRIMARY> - The VIP you will use to access TOS Aurora as described in Prerequisites
    • <SERVICE-CIDR> - The CIDR you want to use for the Kubernetes service network, as described in Prerequisites

    • <PODS-CIDR> Optional. The CIDR you want to use for the Kubernetes pods network, as described in Prerequisites. The default pods network is 10.244.0.0/16

    • <MODULE-TYPE> - One of the following values:

      • ST for SecureTrack only
      • ST, SC for both SecureTrack and SecureChange/SecureApp
      • RC for a remote collector
    • <LOAD> - small, medium or large, as provided by your account team, based on your sizing calculation.

    There is also an option to do a dry run, to verify the procedure in advance by going through all the stages without installing anything. To do a dry run, add the parameter --dry-run to the install command.

    [<ADMIN> ~]$ sudo tos install --modules=<MODULE-TYPE> --primary-vip=<PRIMARY> --services-network=<SERVICE-CIDR> --pod-network=<PODS-CIDR> --load-model=<LOAD> -d
    sudo tos install --modules=<MODULE-TYPE> --primary-vip=<PRIMARY> --services-network=<SERVICE-CIDR> --pod-network=<PODS-CIDR> --load-model=<LOAD> -d

    Examples:

    $ sudo tos install --modules=ST,SC --primary-vip=192.168.1.2 --services-network=10.10.10.0/24 --load-model=medium -d

    $ sudo tos install --modules=RC --primary-vip=162.148.10.0 --services-network=10.10.10.0/24 --load-model=large -d

  12. The EULA is displayed. After reading, enter q to exit the document. If you accept the EULA, enter y and wait until the command completes.

  13. You can now safely exit the CLI tmux session:

    [<ADMIN> ~]# exit
    exit
  14. If the installation was for a central (main) cluster, log into TOS Aurora at https://<VIP> in your browser with user=admin, password=admin. If a warning message is shown regarding the site security certificate, 'accept the risk' and continue to the site. You will be prompted to set a new password.

    If the installation was for a remote collector, connect it to the central cluster.

Post-Install Configuration

SSL Certificates

Secured connections to TOS Aurora require a valid SSL certificate. Such a certificate is generated during the installation. It is automatically renewed when it expires and also when upgrading to later versions of TOS Aurora. When connecting for the first time after certificate renewal, you will be prompted to accept the new certificate. You can also use your own CA signed certificate, but such certificates will not be renewed automatically.

SAN Certificates

For every FortiManager device you intend to monitor, add a SAN signed certificate.

License Activation

Relevant only for central clusters, skip for remote collectors.

After the license is activated, have all TOS users enable the automatic license mechanism in their browser. For more information, see Site Usage Monitoring.

Using Syslog for Accountability and More

To include accountability and rule usage information in TOS Aurora you must configure your devices to send syslogs. For more information see Sending Additional Information via Syslog.

Adding Worker Nodes to Your Cluster

TOS Aurora is deployed as a single node Kubernetes cluster. See Multi-Node Cluster for more information about adding additional nodes.

Setting up External Backups

We recommend setting up backups on external storage.

Setting up Scheduled Backups

We recommend creating a backup policy as soon as possible.

HA (High Availability)

To set up an HA environment, see High Availability.

DR (Disaster Recovery)

To setup TOS redundancy across sites, see Disaster Recovery.

Sending Cluster Health Status to Tufin

Enabled by default, system information is sent periodically to Tufin Support for the purpose of troubleshooting and identifying performance issues. It can be disabled (see Sending Cluster Health Status). The information includes:

  • DB status and size

  • Backup status

  • Kubernetes status and metrics

  • CPU metrics

  • Memory status

  • I/O

  • Configuration changes

  • TOS status

  • Cluster performance

It does not include IP addresses, personal user information, or device information. All the information sent is encrypted and is accessible only to Tufin support teams.

The information is sent to Tufin from TOS users' browsers to the Tufin sub-domain mailbox.tufin.com, therefore requests from user browsers to this sub-domain must be allowed.

TOS Monitoring

TOS Monitoring lets you monitor the status of the TOS cluster and its nodes by generating a notification whenever a change in status occurs, such as a node failing, or a usage threshold reached, such as CPU or disk usage.

We recommend that you set up notifications in TOS Monitoring (see TOS Monitoring).

Additional Configuration

A number of additional parameters can be set now or later e.g. session timeout and SNMP - see Configuring TOS.

SecureChange Settings

Relevant only for central clusters; skip for remote collectors.

If you have installed SecureChange:

  1. Go into SecureChange by one the following means:

    • Sign in to TOS with the URL given previously and then select SecureChange from the app launcher.

    • Sign in directly to SecureChange by entering https://<IP>/tufinapps/securechange in the browser.

  2. Configure the DNS.

    1. Go to Settings > Miscellaneous.

    2. Delete the default value that appears in the field Server DNS name. Enter a value for Server DNS name - the DNS server to use for links in email notifications. This can be an IP address in the format 11.22.33.44 or a FQDN in the format https://mydomain.com. The SecureChange DNS name is published by SecureChange so it can be accessed from external sources. For example, it is embedded in notification mails sent by SecureChange, which include a link to a ticket, such as an email notifying a handler assigned with a task, or informing a requester that the ticket has been successfully resolved.

  3. Additional setup that can be done now or later:

    • Internal SSO Authentication. Internal SSO is enabled by default when TOS is installed, giving user access to all TOS components using the same credentials - SecureTrack, SecureChange, SecureApp, and extensions. When disabled, there is no connection between a SecureTrack user and SecureChange user with the same name.
    • Mail server connection
    • LDAP directory connection to use LDAP user accounts
    • Local users and user roles
    • Subsequent password changes can be made from the command line , see SecureChange Command Line Reference.
    • Change access to SecureTrack from SecureChange

      1. Go to Settings > SecureTrack:

      2. Change the default SecureTrack administrator. For SecureChange to access SecureTrack data, a SecureTrack administrator must be specified. By default this is the predefined user 'Admin' and everything will work fine if you leave it as it is. However, if you want a different user, create a new administrator and enter the user name. If you have already configured multi-domain management, this user can be either a super administrator or multi-domain administrator, depending on whether you want to restrict the administrator to selected domains.

      3. Remove link to SecureTrack . By default you can go from SecureChange to SecureTrack by selecting the SecureTrack link in the app launcher. If you want to remove this option, unmark the checkbox.

      4. Change connection check interval. The default value for the frequency of SecureChange testing connectivity to SecureTrack can be changed if desired.

      5. Click Test connection to verify that SecureChange has a connection to SecureTrack.

      6. Click Refresh license status. This will ensure that SecureTrack and SecureChange share the highest level of connectivity.

      7. Click Save.