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VPN 2

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Title: VPN 2


1
Virtual Private Network
Lecture-13
  • BSIT-7th
  • University of Okara

2
Table of Content
  • Why we need Virtual Private Networks.
  • What a Virtual Private Network consists of.
  • What a Virtual Private Network does.
  • How a Virtual Private Network does what it does.
  • Pros and Cons of VPNs

3
Imagine the Following Scenario
  • You are a network administrator hired by a
    company to create a network which is both private
    yet able to access the internet.
  • How would you do it?

4
You Could
  • Create a network comprised of both an internal
    and external network. By internal we mean a
    network which is unavailable to those outside of
    the network. Conversely, by external we mean a
    network which is available to those outside of
    the network.

5
Example
  • As you can see, we have two networks. An internal
    network, on the right, which lacks access to the
    internet, i.e. is private, as well as an external
    network, on the left, which is allowed access to
    the internet, i.e. is public.

6
Continuing With Our Previous Scenario
  • Lets say the same company, which had previously
    hired you to build a network, decides to build
    another office building 100 miles away from their
    current office building. You are once again hired
    by the company to build a private network between
    the two office buildings.
  • How would you do it?

7
What Wont Work
  • A LAN based private network would be out of the
    question due to the amount of money to both build
    and maintain such a network.

8
Continuation of What Wont Work
  • We could use a WAN based network to connect both
    office buildings. However, problems associated
    with the amount of money to build and maintain
    such a network would once again arise.
  • What about Leased Lines?

9
What Will Work
  • What are Leased Lines?
  • Leased Lines are connection based, rather than
    packet switch based, lines which a phone company
    or internet service provider will lease to an
    individual or corporation.
  • Due to their connection based nature leased lines
    are guaranteed to remain private.
  • Unfortunately, leased lines are expensive and for
    many companies out of their budget.

10
Why We Need VPN
  • VPN or Virtual Private Networks are a cheaper and
    effective alternative to leased lines which, as
    with leased lines, allow for networks to remain
    private.
  • Unlike leased lines, VPNs do so using packet
    switched networks, i.e. virtual lines.

11
What a VPN Consists of
  • A Virtual Private Network basically consists of a
    router, with specialized software, which acts as
    a gateway between an external network, i.e. the
    internet, and an internal network, i.e. some
    private network.

12
What a VPN Does
  • When a host on an internal, i.e. private, network
    needs to send a packet to a host not on its own
    internal network it sends the packet to the
    specialized router.

13
What a VPN Does (contt.)
  • Once the specialized router receives the packet
    it examines the destination of the packet.
  • The router than encrypts the packet, places it in
    a datagram, and sends it off to its destination.
    The destination in question belongs to another
    specialized router, similar to our previous
    specialized router. This second specialized
    router belongs to the destined hosts VPN and
    acts as its gateway.
  • We are not initially sending the packet to the
    destined host.

14
How a Virtual Private Network Does What it Does
  • Virtual Private Networks use two basic techniques
    to allow them to remain both private, yet at the
    same time do so without the use of expensive
    connection based networks.
  • The two techniques in question
  • Encryption
  • Tunneling

15
NAT Continued
  • Outgoing traffic replaces source IP address
  • Incoming traffic replaces destination IP address

16
References
  • http//computer.howstuffworks.com/vpn.htm
  • http//www.tcpipguide.com/free/t_IPNATPortBasedOve
    rloadedOperationNetworkAddressPor-2.htm
  • IPSec vs. SSL VPNs for Secure Remote
    Accesshttp//www.ajoomal.com/descargas/aventail/I
    PSec_vs120_SSL_VPNs_For_Secure_Remote_Access_-_En
    glish_(A4).pdf
  • http//penguin.dcs.bbk.ac.uk/academic/networks/tra
    nsport-layer/nat/
  • Virtual private networks / Charlie Scott
  • Internetworking with TCP/IP Principles,
    Protocols, and Architecture Volume 1 Fifth
    Edition. Author Douglas E. Comer. Publisher
    Pearson Prentice Hall

17
Questions
  • Define VPN, why its used?
  • Design VPN into your campus.
  • Define NAT.
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