Screened subnet


In network security a screened subnet refers to the use of one or more logical screening routers as a firewall to define three separate subnets: an external router, that separates the external network from a perimeter network, and an internal router that separates the perimeter network from the internal network. The perimeter network, also called a border network or demilitarized zone, is intended for hosting servers that are accessible from or have access to both the internal and external networks. The purpose of a screened subnet or DMZ is to establish a network with heightened security that is situated between an external and presumed hostile network, such as the Internet or an extranet, and an internal network.
A screened subnet is an essential concept for e-commerce or any entity that has a presence in the World Wide Web or is using electronic payment systems or other network services because of the prevalence of hackers, advanced persistent threats, computer worms, botnets, and other threats to networked information systems.

Physical separation of routers

By separating the firewall system into two separate component routers it achieves greater potential throughput by reducing the computational load of each router. As each component router of the screened subnet firewall needs to implement only one general task, each router has a less complex configuration. A screened subnet or DMZ can also be achieved by a single firewall device with three network interfaces.

Relationship to DMZ

The term demilitarized zone in military context refers to an area in which treaties or agreements between contending groups forbid military installations and activities, often along an established frontier or boundary between two or more military powers or alliances. The similarity to network security is that the screened network has reduced fortifications because it has intended points of ingress from the external network which is presumed to be hostile.
It appears that the term demilitarized zone was popularized as a sales and marketing term sometime after the development of screened routers and firewalls. It is often used as a synonym but may have once had a different meaning.

Comparison to screened host firewall / architecture

Whereas the screened subnet firewall employs two screened routers to create three subnets, a screened host firewall employs only one screened router to define two subnets: an external network and an internal network. The screened subnet firewall is more secure because an intruder must traverse two filtered routes to reach the internal network. If the bastion / DMZ host is compromised the intruder must still bypass the second filtered route to reach internal network hosts.