HPE FlexNetwork 10500 Series Security Configuration Manual page 348

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algorithms such as DES, 3DES, and AES, and authentication algorithms HMAC-MD5 and
HMAC-SHA1.
Both AH and ESP provide authentication services, but the authentication service provided by AH is
stronger. In practice, you can choose either or both security protocols. When both AH and ESP are
used, an IP packet is encapsulated first by ESP and then by AH.
Encapsulation modes
IPsec supports the following encapsulation modes:
Transport mode—The security protocols protect the upper layer data of an IP packet. Only the
transport layer data is used to calculate the security protocol headers. The calculated security
protocol headers and the encrypted data (only for ESP encapsulation) are placed after the
original IP header. You can use the transport mode when end-to-end security protection is
required (the secured transmission start and end points are the actual start and end points of
the data). The transport mode is typically used for protecting host-to-host communications, as
shown in
Figure 92 IPsec protection in transport mode
Host A
Tunnel mode—The security protocols protect the entire IP packet. The entire IP packet is used
to calculate the security protocol headers. The calculated security protocol headers and the
encrypted data (only for ESP encapsulation) are encapsulated in a new IP packet. In this mode,
the encapsulated packet has two IP headers. The inner IP header is the original IP header. The
outer IP header is added by the network device that provides the IPsec service. You must use
the tunnel mode when the secured transmission start and end points are not the actual start and
end points of the data packets (for example, when two gateways provide IPsec but the data
start and end points are two hosts behind the gateways). The tunnel mode is typically used for
protecting gateway-to-gateway communications, as shown in
Figure 93 IPsec protection in tunnel mode
Host A
Figure 94
shows how the security protocols encapsulate an IP packet in different encapsulation
modes.
Figure 94 Security protocol encapsulations in different modes
Mode
Protocol
AH
ESP
AH-ESP
Figure
92.
IPsec tunnel
IPsec tunnel
Gateway A
Transport
IP
AH
Data
IP
ESP
Data
ESP-T
IP
AH
ESP
Data
ESP-T
Data flow
Gateway B
Data flow
Tunnel
IP
AH IP
Data
IP
ESP IP
IP
AH
ESP
331
Host B
Figure
93.
Host B
Data
ESP-T
IP
Data
ESP-T

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