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The world has
changed a lot in the last couple of decades. Instead of simply dealing with
local or regional concerns, many businesses now have to think about global
markets and logistics. Many companies have facilities spread out across the
country or around the world, and there is one thing that all of them need: A way
to maintain fast, secure and reliable communications wherever their offices are.
Until fairly recently, this has meant the use of leased lines to
maintain a wide area network (WAN). Leased lines, ranging from ISDN (integrated
services digital network, 128 Kbps) to OC3 (Optical
Carrier-3, 155 Mbps) fiber, provided a company with a way to expand its private
network beyond its immediate geographic area. A WAN had obvious
advantages over a public network like the Internet when it came to reliability,
performance and security. But maintaining a WAN, particularly when using leased
lines, can become quite expensive and often rises in cost as the distance
between the offices increases.
As the popularity of the Internet grew, businesses turned to it as a means of
extending their own networks. First came intranets, which are
password-protected sites designed for use only by company employees. Now, many
companies are creating their own VPN (virtual private network) to
accommodate the needs of remote employees and distant offices.
Image courtesy Cisco Systems, Inc. A typical
VPN might have a main LAN at the corporate
headquarters of a company, other LANs at remote offices or facilities and
individual users connecting from out in the
field.
Basically, a VPN is a private network that uses a public network (usually the
Internet) to connect remote sites or users together. Instead of using a
dedicated, real-world connection such as leased line, a VPN uses "virtual"
connections routed
through the Internet from the company's private network to the remote site or
employee. In this article, you will gain a fundamental understanding of VPNs,
and learn about basic VPN components, technologies, tunneling and security.
What Makes
a VPN? A well-designed VPN can greatly benefit a company. For example,
it can:
Extend geographic connectivity
Improve security
Reduce operational costs versus traditional WAN
Reduce transit time and transportation costs for remote users
Improve productivity
Simplify network topology
Provide global networking opportunities
Provide telecommuter support
Provide broadband networking compatibility
Provide faster ROI (return on investment) than traditional WAN
What features are needed in a well-designed VPN? It should incorporate:
Security
Reliability
Scalability
Network management
Policy management
There are three types of VPN. In the next couple of sections, we'll describe
them in detail.
Remote-Access VPN There are two common types of VPN.
Remote-access, also called a virtual private dial-up network
(VPDN), is a user-to-LAN connection used by a company that has employees
who need to connect to the private network from various remote locations.
Typically, a corporation that wishes to set up a large remote-access VPN will
outsource to an enterprise service provider (ESP). The ESP sets up
a network access server (NAS) and provides the remote users with
desktop client software for their computers. The telecommuters can then dial a
toll-free number to reach the NAS and use their VPN client software to access
the corporate network.
A good example of a company that needs a remote-access VPN would be a large
firm with hundreds of sales people in the field. Remote-access VPNs permit
secure, encrypted
connections between a company's private network and remote users through a
third-party service provider.
Image courtesy Cisco Systems, Inc. Examples
of the three types of
VPN
Site-to-Site VPN Through the use of dedicated equipment and
large-scale encryption, a company can connect multiple fixed sites over a public
network such as the Internet. Site-to-site VPNs can be one of two types:
Intranet-based - If a company has one or more remote locations that
they wish to join in a single private network, they can create an intranet VPN
to connect LAN to
LAN.
Extranet-based - When a company has a close relationship with another
company (for example, a partner, supplier or customer), they can build an
extranet VPN that connects LAN to LAN, and that allows all of the various
companies to work in a shared environment.
Image courtesy Cisco Systems, Inc. Examples
of the three types of
VPN
Analogy:
Each LAN is an Island Imagine that you live on an island in a huge
ocean. There are thousands of other islands all around you, some very close and
others farther away. The normal way to travel is to take a ferry from your
island to whichever island you wish to visit. Of course, traveling on a ferry
means that you have almost no privacy. Anything you do can be seen by someone
else.
Let's say that each island represents a private LAN and the ocean is the
Internet. Traveling by ferry is like connecting to a Web server or other device
through the Internet. You have no control over the wires and routers that make
up the Internet, just like you have no control over the other people on the
ferry. This leaves you susceptible to security issues if you are trying to
connect between two private networks using a public resource.
Continuing with our analogy, your island decides to build a bridge to another island
so that there is easier, more secure and direct way for people to travel between
the two. It is expensive to build and maintain the bridge, even though the
island you are connecting with is very close. But the need for a reliable,
secure path is so great that you do it anyway. Your island would like to connect
to a second island that is much farther away but decides that the cost are
simply too much to bear.
This is very much like having a leased line. The bridges (leased lines) are
separate from the ocean (Internet), yet are able to connect the islands (LANs).
Many companies have chosen this route because of the need for security and
reliability in connecting their remote offices. However, if the offices are very
far apart, the cost can be prohibitively high -- just like trying to build a
bridge that spans a great distance.
So how does VPN fit in? Using our analogy, we could give each inhabitant of
our islands a small submarine. Let's
assume that your submarine has some amazing properties:
It's fast.
It's easy to take with you wherever you go.
It's able to completely hide you from any other boats or submarines.
It's dependable.
It costs little to add additional submarines to your fleet once the first is
purchased.
In our analogy, each person having a submarine is like a remote user
having access to the company's private
network.
Although they are traveling in the ocean along with other traffic, the
inhabitants of our two islands could travel back and forth whenever they wanted
to with privacy and security. That's essentially how a VPN works. Each remote
member of your network can communicate in a secure and reliable manner using the
Internet as the medium to connect to the private LAN. A VPN can grow to
accommodate more users and different locations much easier than a leased line.
In fact, scalability is a major advantage that VPNs have over typical
leased lines. Unlike with leased lines, where the cost increases in proportion
to the distances involved, the geographic locations of each office matter little
in the creation of a VPN.
VPN
Security: Firewalls A well-designed VPN uses several methods for
keeping your connection and data secure:
Firewalls
Encryption
IPSec
AAA Server
In the following sections, we'll discuss each of
these security methods. We'll start with the firewall.
A firewall
provides a strong barrier between your private network and the Internet. You can
set firewalls to restrict the number of open ports, what type of packets are
passed through and which protocols are allowed through. Some VPN products, such
as Cisco's
1700 routers, can be upgraded to include firewall capabilities by running
the appropriate Cisco IOS on them. You should already have a good firewall in
place before you implement a VPN, but a firewall can also be used to terminate
the VPN sessions.
VPN
Security: Encryption Encryption is the process of taking all the data
that one computer is sending to another and encoding it into a form that only
the other computer will be able to decode. Most computer encryption
systems belong in one of two categories:
Symmetric-key encryption
Public-key encryption
In symmetric-key encryption, each computer has a secret key (code)
that it can use to encrypt a packet of information before it is sent over the
network to another computer. Symmetric-key requires that you know which
computers will be talking to each other so you can install the key on each one.
Symmetric-key encryption is essentially the same as a secret code that each of
the two computers must know in order to decode the information. The code
provides the key to decoding the message. Think of it like this: You create a
coded message to send to a friend in which each letter is substituted with the
letter that is two down from it in the alphabet. So "A" becomes "C," and "B"
becomes "D". You have already told a trusted friend that the code is "Shift by
2". Your friend gets the message and decodes it. Anyone else who sees the
message will see only nonsense.
The
sending computer encrypts the document with a symmetric key, then encrypts the
symmetric key with the public key of the receiving computer. The receiving
computer uses its private key to decode the symmetric key. It then uses the
symmetric key to decode the document.
Public-key encryption uses a combination of a private key and a public
key. The private key is known only to your computer, while the public key is
given by your computer to any computer that wants to communicate securely with
it. To decode an encrypted message, a computer must use the public key, provided
by the originating computer, and its own private key. A very popular public-key
encryption utility is called Pretty Good Privacy (PGP), which allows you
to encrypt almost anything. You can find out more about PGP at the
PGP site.
VPN
Security: IPSec Internet Protocol Security Protocol (IPSec) provides
enhanced security features such as better encryption algorithms and more
comprehensive authentication.
Photo courtesy Cisco Systems, Inc. A
remote-access VPN utilizing
IPSec
IPSec has two encryption modes: tunnel and transport. Tunnel
encrypts the header and the payload of each packet while transport only encrypts
the payload. Only systems that are IPSec compliant can take advantage of this
protocol. Also, all devices must use a common key and the firewalls of each
network must have very similar security policies set up. IPSec can encrypt data
between various devices, such as:
Router to router
Firewall to router
PC to router
PC to server
VPN
Security: AAA Servers AAA (authentication, authorization and
accounting) servers are used for more secure access in a remote-access VPN
environment. When a request to establish a session comes in from a dial-up
client, the request is proxied to the AAA server. AAA then checks the following:
Who you are (authentication)
What you are allowed to do (authorization)
What you actually do (accounting)
The accounting information is especially useful for tracking client use for
security auditing, billing or reporting purposes.
VPN
Technologies Depending on the type of VPN (remote-access or
site-to-site), you will need to put in place certain components to build your
VPN. These might include:
Desktop software client for each remote user
Dedicated hardware such as a VPN concentrator or secure PIX firewall
NAS (network access server) used by service provider for remote-user VPN
access
VPN network and policy-management center
Because there is no widely accepted standard for implementing a VPN, many
companies have developed turn-key solutions on their own. In the next few
sections, we'll discuss some of the solutions offered by Cisco, one of the most
prevelant networking technology companies.
VPN
Concentrator Incorporating the most advanced encryption and
authentication techniques available, Cisco VPN concentrators are built
specifically for creating a remote-access VPN. They provide high availability,
high performance and scalability and include components, called scalable
encryption processing (SEP) modules, that enable users to easily
increase capacity and throughput. The concentrators are offered in models
suitable for everything from small businesses with up to 100 remote-access users
to large organizations with up to 10,000 simultaneous remote users.
Photo courtesy Cisco Systems, Inc. The Cisco
VPN 3000 Concentrator
VPN-Optimized Router Cisco's VPN-optimized routers provide
scalability, routing, security and QoS (quality of service). Based on the Cisco
IOS (Internet Operating System) software, there is a router suitable for
every situation, from small-office/home-office (SOHO) access through
central-site VPN aggregation, to large-scale enterprise needs.
Photo courtesy Cisco Systems, Inc. The Cisco
1750 Modular Access
Router
Photo courtesy Cisco Systems, Inc. The Cisco
PIX Firewall
Instead of using Cisco IOS, this device has a highly streamlined OS that
trades the ability to handle a variety of protocols for extreme robustness and
performance by focusing on IP.
Tunneling Most VPNs rely on tunneling to create a
private network that reaches across the Internet. Essentially, tunneling is the
process of placing an entire packet within
another packet and sending it over a network. The protocol of the outer packet
is understood by the network and both points, called tunnel interfaces,
where the packet enters and exits the network.
Tunneling requires three different protocols:
Carrier protocol - The protocol used by the network that the
information is traveling over
Encapsulating protocol - The protocol (GRE, IPSec, L2F, PPTP, L2TP)
that is wrapped around the original data
Passenger protocol - The original data (IPX, NetBeui, IP) being
carried
Tunneling has amazing implications for VPNs. For example, you can place a
packet that uses a protocol not supported on the Internet (such as NetBeui)
inside an IP packet and send it safely over the Internet. Or you could put a
packet that uses a private (non-routable) IP address inside a packet that uses a
globally unique IP
address to extend a private network over the Internet.
An animated tunneling
demonstration
Tunneling:
Site-to-Site In a site-to-site VPN, GRE (generic routing
encapsulation) is normally the encapsulating protocol that provides the
framework for how to package the passenger protocol for transport over the
carrier protocol, which is typically IP-based. This includes information on what
type of packet you are encapsulating and information about the connection
between the client and server. Instead of GRE, IPSec in tunnel mode is
sometimes used as the encapsulating protocol. IPSec works well on both
remote-access and site-to-site VPNs. IPSec must be supported at both tunnel
interfaces to use.
An animated tunneling
demonstration
Tunneling:
Remote-Access In a remote-access VPN, tunneling normally takes place
using PPP. Part of the TCP/IP stack, PPP
is the carrier for other IP protocols when communicating over the network
between the host computer and a remote system. Remote-access VPN tunneling
relies on PPP.
Each of the protocols listed below were built using the basic structure of
PPP and are used by remote-access VPNs.
L2F (Layer 2 Forwarding) - Developed by Cisco, L2F will use any
authentication scheme supported by PPP.
PPTP (Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol) - PPTP was created by the
PPTP Forum, a consortium which includes US Robotics, Microsoft, 3COM, Ascend and
ECI Telematics. PPTP supports 40-bit and 128-bit encryption and will use any
authentication scheme supported by PPP.
L2TP (Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol) - L2TP is the product of a
partnership between the members of the PPTP Forum, Cisco and the IETF (Internet
Engineering Task Force). Combining features of both PPTP and L2F, L2TP also
fully supports IPSec.
L2TP can be used as a tunneling protocol for site-to-site VPNs as well as
remote-access VPNs. In fact, L2TP can create a tunnel between:
Client and router
NAS and router
Router and router
The truck is the carrier protocol, the box is the encapsulating
protocol and the computer is the passenger
protocol.
Think of tunneling as having a computer delivered to you by
UPS. The vendor packs the computer (passenger protocol) into a box
(encapsulating protocol) which is then put on a UPS truck (carrier protocol) at
the vendor's warehouse (entry tunnel interface). The truck (carrier protocol)
travels over the highways (Internet) to your home (exit tunnel interface) and
delivers the computer. You open the box (encapsulating protocol) and remove the
computer (passenger protocol). Tunneling is just that simple!
As you can see, VPNs are a great way for a company to keep its employees and
partners connected no matter where they are.
Some companies ask, Why use a VPN? You may need to consider if it makes sense for your organization.
The answer to this and many more questions can be found in our VPN Resource Center. Everything you have ever wanted to know regarding VPN. Learn more today by visiting the VPN Resource Center or contact a specially trained VPN Sales Professional Toll Free (888)872-5619.