VPN
A VPN (Virtual Private Network) is a dedicated connection to a LAN (Local Area Network) via the internet. When connected via a VPN connection, a Local Area Network is not restricted by the limitations regarding physical cables, and the local network can therefore connect to the internet through a VPN client.
VPNs can be typically characterized as host-to-network or remote access by connecting a single computer to a network or as site-to-site for connecting two networks.
Common tunneling protocols
- IP in IP (Protocol 4): IP in IPv4/IPv6
- SIT/IPv6 (Protocol 41): IPv6 in IPv4/IPv6
- GRE (Protocol 47): Generic Routing Encapsulation
- OpenVPN (UDP port 1194): Openvpn. It uses a custom security protocol that utilizes SSL/TLS for key exchange.
- SSTP (TCP port 443): Secure Socket Tunneling Protocol
- IPSec (Protocol 50 and 51): Internet Protocol Security, IKEv1 and IKEv2 modes). Tunnel and transport modes. UDP packets port 500.
- L2TP (Protocol 115): Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol
- VXLAN (UDP port 4789): Virtual Extensible Local Area Network.
- WireGuard
- GCP Cloud VPN
Cloud services
PAN-OS: show vpn
Read: https://docs.paloaltonetworks.com/pan-os/9-0/pan-os-admin/vpns.html
Related terms
- Google Fi
- Cisco IPSec
- StrongDM company
clientvpn.ap-south-1.amazonaws.com
See Also
- VPN: IPsec (Openswan), OpenVPN, Forticlient, GlobalProtect (PAN-OS), WireGuard (Linux Kernel), Tailscale, PulseSecure, WebVPN, SoftEther, ESP, IKE, AWS VPN, Zerotier, VPN client, Pritunl, GCP Cloud VPN, Mesh virtual private network, Mullvad
- ReviewsDir: VPN Beginner's Guide
- PAN-OS:
show vpn flow
- AAA Servers, such as RADIUS, LDAP or Active Directory (AD)
- Cisco PIX. Cisco AnyConnect, Cisco ASA, Cisco Adaptive Security Device Manager
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