Architecture Overview
This section of the documentation contains a deep dive into the Firezone product architecture, intended for technical decision-makers and curious readers alike who want a better understanding of how Firezone works under the hood.
Remember: Firezone is open source. If you really want to see how everything works, we encourage you to read the code.
Introduction
At its core, Firezone is a secure remote access platform that connects users to computing resources.
These resources can be anything from a private web application or database to public SaaS apps and even entire subnets. Firezone makes no assumptions about what you want to secure access to.
Firezone operates at layer 3 of the OSI model. This means it can secure any resource that can be accessed over IP, include TCP, UDP, and HTTP-based services, similar to traditional VPNs.
What's different about Firezone?
Unlike traditional VPNs, however, Firezone has the following key differences:
- Open source: All source code is available for anyone to audit on GitHub.
- Scalable: Firezone was designed to be horizontally scalable from the start. Simply deploy more Gateways to handle more traffic.
- Secure: Firezone is built on WireGuard®, a fast, provably-secure VPN protocol. Firezone further builds on this security with ephemeral encryption keys and firewall hole-punching to limit your exposed attack surface.
- Easy to manage: No firewall configuration or complex ACLs are required. Firezone's Policy Engine makes access easy to manage and audit at scale.
Key design principles
Firezone was built to secure organizations in a world where traditional perimeter-based security models are no longer effective.
The global workforce is increasingly remote, and the resources they need to access are distributed across multiple cloud providers and on-premises data centers. This creates a complex security challenge for organizations looking to maintain a strong security posture.
To address these challenges, Firezone incorporates the following key design principles:
- Zero trust architecture: Firezone follows what's commonly known as a Zero Trust security model. This means all users and devices are untrusted by default and must be authenticated and authorized continuously before accessing each protected Resource. Firezone's architecture draws heavily from The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)'s published guidelines on zero trust architecture.
- Integration with existing identity providers: Identity verification is paramount to any Zero Trust architecture. Firezone integrates with virtually any identity provider to authenticate your users in a secure and standards-compliant way. Directory sync takes this a step further to ensure Firezone always has the latest user and group information to use when evaluating access Policies.
- Portable and reliable: Firezone can only protect resources where it's deployed. If Firezone doesn't work reliably on a particular server or end-user device, it won't be used, and that creates a potential entrypoint for attackers. Firezone's tech stack was chosen carefully to make sure it runs reliably on a wide variety of platforms and devices.
What to read next
- Core components: A high-level overview of the key concepts that power Firezone's access model.
- Tech stack: Why we chose the tech we did, and how it all fits together.
- Critical sequences: Sequence diagrams that illustrate the interactions that power Firezone's core functionality.
- Security controls: Details about the cryptography used in Firezone and how to report security vulnerabilities.
Need additional help?
Try asking on one of our community-powered support channels:
- Discussion forums: Ask questions, report bugs, and suggest features.
- Discord server: Join discussions, meet other users, and chat with the Firezone team
- Email us: We read every message.