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| Networking Error ! Networking Errors and Queries |
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Virtual Private Networks (VPN / PPTP)
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The Internet has evolved in the last year to one of the main issues in networking: ![]() Most people use it to "surf": to view WWW-webpages in HTML-format. But the Internet has also its security problems, because any information transmitted from your system (like: your credit-card number , you enter on making an online purchase), is transmitted via several stages to the destination server, and somebody could listen in to that transmission: ![]() That problem was solved by introducing SHTTP (Secure Hyper Text ) in addition to the standard HTTP-protocol. Now the worldwide availability of the Internet becomes more and more interesting for companies for internal use:
It is very easy to setup a Windows system (95 / 98 / NT4) to share a drive via the Internet, but again, it leaves a security problem: ![]() unauthorized people (usually called hackers) try to break in (not everybody has such top secret information like the US Department of Defense, which have several hundred such attacks a day, but hackers can do some damage to any data). For that reason, companies connecting their network to the Internet usually try to protect their system by installing a "Firewall": a filter between the Internet and the company network. To allow secure connection via the Internet, several companies (including Microsoft) agreed on a new protocol: Point-to-Point TunnelingProtocol (PPTP). PPTP allows to establish via an IP-network (which is usually the Internet, but can also be a company Intranet) a secure connection by encapsulating inside the IP-packet an encrypted private protocol, which can be NetBEUI, IPX or TCP/IP (with a private IP-address range): ![]() There are several companies offering now devices/support for PPTP. Microsoft has implemented PPTP on Windows 95 / 98 / NT4 as: Virtual Private Network (VPN): ![]() Using NetBEUI as example, the above animation shows: - the network client passes a request to the protocol layer - the request is wrapped in a protocol envelope (in this example: NetBEUI) - the protocol envelope is passed on to the VPN-adapter - the protocol envelope is wrapped again inside a TCP/IP envelope - the TCP/IP envelope is transmitted via the Internet on the receiving system: - the VPN-adapter opens the TCP/IP envelope. - the protocol envelope is then opened again. - the data (the "letter inside 2 envelopes") is passed on to its final destination. You can download detailed information via a link from: http://www.microsoft.com/communicati...Pdownload0.htm on:
it downloads as MSPPTP.EXE (143 Kbyte), which is self-extracting to a word-file: PPTPInstall5-22.doc (1.378 KByte) with 34 pages.
While Windows NT4 Server can handle MULTIPLE incoming VPN-connections and while Windows NT4 workstation can handle ONE incoming VPN-connection, Windows95 and Windows98 can only be VPN-Clients: able to establish the connection to an NT4 VPN-server, but not beeing able to act as a VPN-server, accepting incoming VPN-connections. Windows95/98 cannot act as VPN-server (but Windows95/98 is able to provide simple disk sharing via the Internet)
- Installation of the Windows NT4 RAS-Server - Connection with Windows NT4 RAS-Server to the Internet - Installation of the Windows NT4 RAS-VPN Server - Allowing connection to Windows NT4 RAS-VPN Server - Installation of the Windows95/98 VPN-Client - Configure the Windows95/98 VPN Connection - Connect from Windows95/98 to a VPN server Using a Windows NT4 workstation as a VPN-dialin to a Server network: ![]() - Installating NT4 RAS as VPN-Dialin to a Network - Windows95/98 as VPN-Client dialing into a Novell network Using a Windows NT4 workstation as a TCP/IP-dialin to a Mainframe: ![]() |
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