Internet and Intranet Fundamentals
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Transcript Internet and Intranet Fundamentals
Internet and Intranet
Fundamentals
Class 9
Session C
Virtual Private Networks
• What is it?
• Technology Basis
• GTE’s VPN Advantage
VPN
What is it?
• Used to mean shared public telecom lines
– e.g., frame relay vs. dedicated leased lines
• Now it means securely tunneling over the
Internet
– extending a private Intranet across the Internet
• I.e. enabling an Extranet
– compatible with older meaning because Internet
is shared public infrastructure
VPN
What is it?
Before VPNs
VPN
What is it?
• Features
– security
– QOS
• router conspiracies?
VPN
What is it?
• Benefits
– cost reduction: shared public infrastructure such
as Internet only requires local connectivity
• point-to-point leased lines are mileage sensitive
• 20-40% for LAN-LAN
• 60-80% for remote access
– ubiquity: the Internet is everywhere
• the Internet is the data dial-tone
• can enable companies with no private network to
create one virtually
VPN
What is it?
• An Important Trend
– Gartner Group predicts nearly 100% of all
businesses will use VPNs to supplement their
WANs by 2003
Technology Basis
• Encryption
– Phase 1: encrypt payload but not header
– Phase 2: encrypt both payload and header and
encapsulate in another IP packet
• Lots of “Standards” to Choose From
– Cisco L2F = Layer 2 Forwarding
– MS PPTP
– MS and Cisco L2TP = Layer 2 Tunneling
Protocol
Technology Basis
• Data Integrity Technology
– MD-5 = message digest
– SHA = Secure Hashing Algorithm
• Authentication
Technology Basis
Layer 2 Forwarding
• Developed by Cisco
– Company Gateway is a Cisco router
– Internet Direct VPN being launched
• How It Works
– end-user exchanges PPP with ISP at POP
– router at ISP communicates with company
router via L2F
Technology Basis
Microsoft’s PPTP
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Extension to PPP
Company Gateway is NT RAS server
Included with Win 95, 98, NT
Supports IP, IPX, and NetBEUI
Client-Server Protocol decouples functions
in Network Access Servers (NAS)
– PPTP Access Concentrator (PAC) (client)
– PPTP Network Server (PNS) (server)
Technology Basis
Microsoft’s PPTP
• PPTP Access Concentrator (PAC)
– device attached to one or more PSTN or ISDN
lines capable of PPP operation and of handling
PPTP protocol
– PAC needs only to implement TCP/IP to pass
traffic to one or more PNSs
– May also tunnel non-IP protocols
Technology Basis
Microsoft’s PPTP
• PPTP Network Server (PNS)
– envisioned to operate on general-purpose
computing/server platforms
– handles server side of PPTP protocol
– relies completely on TCP/IP
• is independent of interface hardware
• may use any combination of IP interface hardware
including LAN and WAN devices
Technology Basis
Microsoft’s PPTP
• Specifies call-control and management
protocol
– allows server to control access for dial-in
circuit switched calls originating from PSTN or
ISDN
– or to initiate outbound circuit-switched
connections.
Technology Basis
Microsoft’s PPTP
• Uses enhanced GRE (Generic Routing
Encapsulation) mechanism
– provides a flow- and congestion-controlled
encapsulated datagram service for carrying PPP
packets.
Technology Basis
Microsoft’s and Cicso’s L2TP
• L2TP extends PPP model
– allows L2 and PPP endpoints to reside on
different devices interconnected by packetswitched network
– a user has L2 connection to access concentrator
(e.g., modem bank, ADSL DSLAM, etc.)
– concentrator then tunnels individual PPP frames
to the NAS
– allows actual processing of PPP packets to be
divorced from termination of L2 circuit
Technology Basis
Microsoft’s and Cicso’s L2TP
• L2TP Access Concentrator (LAC)
– node that acts as one side of an L2TP tunnel
endpoint and is peer to L2TP Network Server
(LNS)
– sits between an LNS and remote system and
forwards packets to and from each
– packets sent from LAC to LNS require
tunneling with L2TP protocol
– connection from LAC to remote system is
either local (see: Client LAC) or a PPP link
Technology Basis
Microsoft’s and Cicso’s L2TP
• L2TP Network Server (LNS)
– node that acts as one side of an L2TP tunnel
endpoint
– peer to L2TP Access Concentrator (LAC)
– termination point of PPP session being tunneled
from remote system by LAC
Technology Basis
Microsoft’s and Cicso’s L2TP
Technology Basis
Microsoft’s and Cicso’s L2TP
Technology Basis
Microsoft’s and Cicso’s L2TP
• Three levels of end-to-end QoS service
– Best Effort Service --Provides basic
connectivity with no guarantees
– Differentiated Service -- Some traffic is treated
better than rest (more bandwidth on average,
lower loss rate on average)
• statistical preference; not a hard and fast guarantee
– Guaranteed Service -- An absolute reservation
of network resources for specific traffic
Genuity’s VPN Advantage
• See Web Site
– http://www.genuity.com/services/security/vpna
dvantage/index.htm
• Managed VPN Service
• SLA on Dedicated Access
– 99.9% Availability
– 125 ms Latency