Site-to-Site Tunnel Status
•
Tunnel(s) Used
—
VPN tunnels in use.
•
Tunnel(s) Available
—
Available VPN tunnels.
•
Tunnel(s) Enabled
—
VPN tunnels enabled.
•
Tunnel(s) Defined
—
Defined VPN tunnels.
In the Connection Table, you can add, edit, delete, or refresh a tunnel. (See
Site-to-Site, on page 80
). You
can also click on
Column Display Selection
to select the column headers displayed in the Connection Table.
Client-to-Site Tunnel Status
In this mode, the client from Internet connects to the server to access the corporate network/LAN behind the
server. For a secure connection, you can implement a client-to-site VPN. You can view all the Client-to-Tunnel
connections, add, edit, or delete the connections in the Connection Table. (See
Client to Site, on page 85
).
The
Connection Table
displays the following:
•
Group or Tunnel Name
—
Name of the VPN tunnel. This is for reference purposes only and does not
match the name used at the other end of the tunnel.
•
Connections
—
Status of the connection.
•
Phase2 Encryption/Auth/Group
—
Phase 2 encryption type
(NULL/DES/3DES/AES-128/AES-192/AES-256), authentication method (NULL/MD5/SHA1), and
DH group number (1/2/5).
•
Local Group
—
IP address and subnet mask of the local group.
SSL VPN Status
A Secure Sockets Layer virtual private network (SSLVPN) allows users to establish a secure, remote-access
VPN tunnel to this device by using a web browser. SSL VPN provides secure, easy access to a broad range
of web resources and web-enabled applications from almost any computer on the Internet. Here, you can view
the status of the SSL VPN tunnels.
•
Tunnel(s) Used
—
SSL VPN Tunnels used for connection.
•
Tunnel(s) available
—
Available tunnels for the SSL VPN connection.
The
Connection Table
shows the status of the established tunnels. You can also add edit or delete connections.
•
Policy Name
—
Name of the policy applied on the tunnel.
•
Session
—
Number of sessions.
You can also add, edit or delete a SSL VPN. (See
SSL VPN, on page 92
).
PPTP Tunnel Status
Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol has the capability to encrypt data with 128-bit. It is used to ensure that
messages sent from one VPN node to another are secure.
•
Tunnel(s) Used
—
PPTP Tunnels used for the VPN connection.
RV345/345P Administration Guide
12
Status and Statistics
VPN Status
Summary of Contents for RV340 Series
Page 28: ...RV345 345P Administration Guide 22 Administration Config Management ...
Page 58: ...RV345 345P Administration Guide 52 QoS Switch Queuing ...
Page 68: ...RV345 345P Administration Guide 62 LAN Router Advertisement ...
Page 102: ...RV345 345P Administration Guide 96 VPN VPN Passthrough ...
Page 108: ...RV345 345P Administration Guide 102 Security IP Source Guard ...
Page 110: ...RV345 345P Administration Guide 104 Where To Go From Here Where To Go From Here ...