Encapsulation; Transport Mode; Tunnel Mode; Figure 66 Transport And Tunnel Mode Ipsec Encapsulation - Nortel BSR222 Configuration

Business secure router
Hide thumbs Also See for BSR222:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

208 Chapter 13 VPN

Encapsulation

The two modes of operation for IPSec VPNs are Transport mode and Tunnel
mode.

Figure 66 Transport and Tunnel mode IPSec encapsulation

Transport mode

Transport mode is used to protect upper layer protocols and only affects the data
in the IP packet. In Transport mode, the IP packet contains the security protocol
(AH or ESP) located after the original IP header and options, but before any
upper layer protocols contained in the packet (such as TCP and UDP).
With ESP, protection is applied only to the upper layer protocols contained in the
packet. The IP header information and options are not used in the authentication
process. Therefore, the originating IP address cannot be verified for integrity
against the data.
With the use of AH as the security protocol, protection is extended forward into
the IP header to verify the integrity of the entire packet by use of portions of the
original IP header in the hashing process.

Tunnel mode

Tunnel mode encapsulates the entire IP packet to transmit it securely. A Tunnel
mode is required for gateway services to provide access to internal systems.
Tunnel mode is fundamentally an IP tunnel with authentication and encryption.
This is the most common mode of operation. Tunnel mode is required for VPN
switch to VPN switch and host to VPN switch communications. Tunnel mode
communications have two sets of IP headers:
NN47922-500

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents