The impending Cisco Umbrella Roaming Client End-of-Life has many Umbrella users concerned about their next steps. If that's you, you might be in a position where you find yourself re-evaluating which protective DNS solution is right for your organization.
The DNSFilter team recently presented on everything you need to know about the End-of-Life announcement, how DNSFilter compares to Cisco Umbrella, and the steps you need to take to quickly and easily migrate to your new protective DNS solution. Watch the replay here, or continue reading for the high-level overview.
Cisco Umbrella was born in 2015 from Cisco’s acquisition of Open DNS. Throughout the years, there have been multiple announcements regarding the state of OpenDNS, including EoL for legacy pricing and forced transition to other products. But the latest announcement is of the impending End-of-Life for OpenDNS successor, Cisco Umbrella.
What does this mean for you? Cisco umbrella users with the Roaming Client installed on their endpoint will be forced to migrate to Cisco Secure Client, the replacement for both Cisco Umbrella RC and AnyConnect. This change is likely to include price increases and will require labor to replace the roaming clients across all of your endpoints.
With an impending migration for Cisco Umbrella Roaming Client customers on the horizon, now is the time to make the switch to protective DNS you can count on.
Enter: DNSFilter.
30 million monthly users trust DNSFilter to protect their endpoints for a few key reasons:
For a more in depth comparison between DNSFilter and Cisco Umbrella, download Cisco Umbrella vs DNSFilter: A Detailed Comparison.
Migrating to DNSFilter from Cisco umbrella requires just 7 simple steps:
Cisco calls their Allow/Block lists Destination Lists. In your Cisco Umbrella dashboard, navigate to Policies > Policy Components > Destination Lists, then expand a Destination List and click Download. You’ll receive a .csv file with your Destination Lists.
DNSFilter has 39 content categories and 9 threat categories. We understand that our category names don’t match up 1:1 with Cisco Umbrella’s category names, so we’ve created this support article to help you map Umbrella content categories to DNSFilter categories.
Importing your lists is extremely simple. In the DNSFilter dashboard, click the green ‘Import CSV’ button and browse to the exported .csv you downloaded from Umbrella. There is no special template required, and no total list limit, but you’ll want to be sure that there is only one domain per line and that each import you do has no more than 2000 lines. To import more than 2000 domains, simply do a second import with your additional domains.
DNSFilter’s block pages are completely customizable. We encourage our customers to have fun with them! We also recommend that you ensure you include a good email for the error notices in order for users to request access to a site if they feel they reached the block page in error.
After policy creation with Allow/Block lists imported and your Block page created, start creating Sites on the DNSFilter Dashboard. Bulk import of these sites are available via our Sales Engineers or Support team. Fill the template out with your Site names and egress addresses, then send it back for DNSFilter to create your sites in bulk.
We’ve got a PowerShell Script for that! To ensure that the process of migrating from Cisco Umbrella to DNSFilter is as simple as possible, our team has developed a script that allows you to quickly and easily uninstall Cisco Umbrella and install DNSFilter on Windows devices.
This script is easy to customize and has robust error handling.
For more information on migrating to DNSFilter from Cisco Umbrella, watch the full webinar presentation here.
Ready to make the switch? Start your 14-day free trial now.