TCP Split Handshake Drop
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TCP Split Handshake Drop

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TCP Split Handshake Drop

The Split Handshake option in a Zone Protection profile will prevent a TCP session from being established if the session establishment procedure does not use the well-known three-way handshake, but instead uses a variation, such as a four-way or five-way split handshake or a simultaneous open.
The Palo Alto Networks® next-generation firewall correctly handles sessions and all Layer 7 processes for split handshake and simultaneous open session establishment without enabling the Split Handshake option. Nevertheless, the Split Handshake option (which causes a TCP split handshake drop) is made available. When the Split Handshake option is configured for a Zone Protection profile and that profile is applied to a zone, TCP sessions for interfaces in that zone must be established using the standard three-way handshake; variations are not allowed.
The Split Handshake option is disabled by default.
The following illustrates the standard three-way handshake used to establish a TCP session with a PAN-OS firewall between the initiator (typically a client) and the listener (typically a server).
The Split Handshake option is configured for a Zone Protection profile that is assigned to a zone. An interface that is a member of the zone drops any synchronization (SYN) packets sent from the server, preventing the following variations of handshakes. The letter A in the figure indicates the session initiator and B indicates the listener. Each numbered segment of the handshake has an arrow indicating the direction of the segment from the sender to the receiver, and each segment indicates the control bit(s) setting.