Book Image

Diving into Secure Access Service Edge

By : Jeremiah
Book Image

Diving into Secure Access Service Edge

By: Jeremiah

Overview of this book

The SASE concept was coined by Gartner after seeing a pattern emerge in cloud and SD-WAN projects where full security integration was needed. The market behavior lately has sparked something like a "space race" for all technology manufacturers and cloud service providers to offer a "SASE" solution. The current training available in the market is minimal and manufacturer-oriented, with new services being released every few weeks. Professional architects and engineers trying to implement SASE need to take a manufacturer-neutral approach. This guide provides a foundation for understanding SASE, but it also has a lasting impact because it not only addresses the problems that existed at the time of publication, but also provides a continual learning approach to successfully lead in a market that evolves every few weeks. Technology teams need a tool that provides a model to keep up with new information as it becomes available and stay ahead of market hype. With this book, you’ll learn about crucial models for SASE success in designing, building, deploying, and supporting operations to ensure the most positive user experience (UX). In addition to SASE, you’ll gain insight into SD-WAN design, DevOps, zero trust, and next-generation technical education methods.
Table of Contents (28 chapters)
1
Part 1 – SASE Market Perspective
7
Part 2 – SASE Technical Perspective
15
Part 3 – SASE Success Perspective
20
Part 4 – SASE Bonus Perspective
Appendix: SASE Terms

Service Definition

SASE is a secure communications service from the network edge to the cloud edge. It is integrated across all the layers of the service; the physical, data link, network, transport, session, presentation, and application layers, as defined by Open Systems Interconnection (OSI). Previous generations of solutions addressed network connectivity at the network layer with some regard to data link layer requirements. Security generally focuses on either the application layer or the network layer, though many attempts have been made over the past 20 years to integrate the data link with the security model. SASE intends to ensure security across all the layers by starting with a Zero-Trust Framework (ZTF). In Chapter 16, SASE Trust, ZTF will be explained further, but for now, we can explain it as follows: if security starts from a deny all, each and every layer must be validated before the next, security becomes pervasive in the service.

SASE does not create any of its...