
select Properties. In the new dialog that opens select the Networking tab and choose
Force to L2TP. Now go back to the L2TP Tunnel properties, select the Security tab and click
on the IPsec Settings button. Now enter the pre-shared key.
9.2.6. L2TP/IPsec Roaming Clients with Certificates
If certificates are used with L2TP roaming clients instead of pre-shared keys then the differences
in the setup described above are as follows:
•
The NetDefendOS date and time must be set correctly since certificates can expire.
•
Load a
Gateway Certificate
and
Root Certificate
into NetDefendOS.
•
When setting up the IPsec Tunnel object, specify the certificates to use under
Authentication. This is done by:
i.
Enable the X.509 Certificate option.
ii.
Select the Gateway Certificate.
iii.
Add the Root Certificate to use.
•
If using the Windows XP L2TP client, the appropriate certificates need to be imported into
Windows before setting up the connection with the New Connection Wizard.
The step to set up user authentication is optional since this is additional security to certificates.
Also review
Section 3.9.4, “CA Server Access”
, which describes important considerations for
certificate validation.
9.2.7. PPTP Roaming Clients
PPTP is simpler to set up than L2TP since IPsec is not used and instead relies on its own, less
strong, encryption.
A major secondary disadvantage is not being able to NAT PPTP connections through a tunnel so
multiple clients can use a single connection to the NetDefend Firewall. If NATing is tried then
only the first client that tries to connect will succeed.
The steps for PPTP setup are as follows:
1.
In the Address Book define the following IP objects:
•
A
pptp_pool
IP object which is the range of internal IP addresses that will be handed out
from an internal network.
•
An
int_net
object which is the internal network from which the addresses come.
•
An
lan_ip
object which is the internal IP address of the interface connected to the
internal network. Let us assume that this interface is
lan
.
•
An
wan_ip
object which is the external public address which clients will connect to (let's
assume this is on the
wan
interface).
2.
Define a PPTP/L2TP object (let's call it
pptp_tunnel
) with the following parameters:
•
Set Inner IP Address to
ip_net
.
Chapter 9: VPN
680
Summary of Contents for NetDefendOS
Page 30: ...Figure 1 3 Packet Flow Schematic Part III Chapter 1 NetDefendOS Overview 30 ...
Page 32: ...Chapter 1 NetDefendOS Overview 32 ...
Page 144: ...Chapter 2 Management and Maintenance 144 ...
Page 284: ...Chapter 3 Fundamentals 284 ...
Page 392: ...Chapter 4 Routing 392 ...
Page 419: ... Host 2001 DB8 1 MAC 00 90 12 13 14 15 5 Click OK Chapter 5 DHCP Services 419 ...
Page 420: ...Chapter 5 DHCP Services 420 ...
Page 573: ...Chapter 6 Security Mechanisms 573 ...
Page 607: ...Chapter 7 Address Translation 607 ...
Page 666: ...Chapter 8 User Authentication 666 ...
Page 775: ...Chapter 9 VPN 775 ...
Page 819: ...Chapter 10 Traffic Management 819 ...
Page 842: ...Chapter 11 High Availability 842 ...
Page 866: ...Default Enabled Chapter 13 Advanced Settings 866 ...
Page 879: ...Chapter 13 Advanced Settings 879 ...