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Making the Right Connection To order this title, and for more information, click here
By
Dennis Fowler
Included in series
The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Networking,
Description
Network-dependent companies are excited by the benefits promised by the virtual private network, including lower costs, greater flexibility,
and improvements in connectivity. But they also have questions: What benefits are real? How can they be measured? What are the expenses
and the dangers?
Virtual Private Networks: Making the Right Connection is an intelligent introduction written especially for business
and IT professionals who want a realistic assessment of what a VPN can provide for their organizations. Covering advantages and risks,
this book expands your understanding of what you can do with a VPN, while detailing all that implementing it will demand of you. With
its help, you'll find your way through VPN hype to the answers you need to make sound decisions.
Contents
CHAPTER 1 DEFINING THE VPN
1.1 What is a VPN?
1.2 What a VPN is good for and why you should consider building one.
1.2.1 Economies
of Sharing
1.2.2 Flexibility
1.2.3 Worldwide connectivity on a budget
1.2.4 The VPN and the Mobil Workforce
1.3 Every Silver Lining
has a Cloud
1.4 How a VPN works.
1.4.1 Tunneling
1.4.2 Securing the Data
1.4.3 Making the Combination Work
1.5 Where we go from
here.
CHAPTER 2 How to use a VPN.
2.1 The VPN for Remote Access
2.1.1 A Medical Software Company
2.1.2 Prudential Insurance
Company
2.2 The VPN as an Extranet
2.2.1 Automotive Network eXchange (ANX)
2.2.2 Open Access Same-time Information Systems (OASIS)
2.3 The VPN as an Intranet
2.3.1 Mazzio's Corp.
2.3.2 Galaxy Scientific Corporation
2.4 Conclusion
CHAPTER 3 The Downside to
VPNs
3.1 Do You Really Need a VPN?
3.2 Connection Availability
3.3 Security
3.3.1 Snooping or sniffing
3.3.2 Capturing Addresses
3.3.3 Session Hijacking
3.3.4 Data Tampering
3.4 The Lack of Standards
3.5 Performance/Quality of Service
3.6 Hidden Costs
3.7
Management
3.8 Fitting it in with your architecture
3.9 End user training
3.10 Security, again
3.11 Conclusion
CHAPTER 4: Internet
versus Other VPNs
4.1 Clearing Up Some Confusion
4.1.1 The Internet
4.1.2 TCP/IP on other networks.
4.1.3 Frame Relay, ATM and
TCP/IP
4.2 The Internet vs. Private Services
4.2.1 The Frame Relay Advantages
4.2.2 An Example of a Frame Relay VPN
4.3 The Trade-offs
4.3.1 The Cost Factor
4.3.2 Flexibility
4.3.3 Security
4.3.4 Reliability and Accountability
4.3.5 Customer Services and Technical
Support
4.4 Conclusion
CHAPTER 5 - ENCRYPTION
5.1 An Overview of Encryption
5.2 Secret key (Symmetric) Cryptosystems
5.3 Public
(asymmetric) Key Cryptosystems
5.3.1 Diffie-Hellman (DH)
5.3.2 Rivest Shamir Adleman (RSA) Encryption
5.3.3 Other Public Key Systems
5.4 Digital Signatures, Hashing and MACs
5.5 Putting it all together.
5.6 Conclusion
CHAPTER 6 USER AUTHENTICATION, AUTHORIZATION
AND KEY MANAGEMENT
6.1 User Authentication
6.1.1 THE USERNAME-PASSWORD CHALLENGE
6.1.2 VPN USER AUTHENTICATION - THE SIMPLEST SCENARIO
RADIUS
TACACS
KERBEROS
6.2 KEY MANAGEMENT AND CERTIFICATE AUTHORITIES
6.2.1 CERTIFICATE AUTHORITIES
6.2.2 THE ITU-T X.509 CERTIFICATE
STANDARD AND PKI
6.2.3 PKCS
6.2.4 LDAP and VPNs
6.3 MAKING THE CONNECTION; MORE THAN JUST MANAGING KEYS.
6.3.1 ISAKMP/Oakley,
alias IKE
6.4 CONCLUSION
CHAPTER 7: TUNNELING AND THE VPN PROTOCOL SUITES
7.1 TUNNELING
7.1.1 The IP Packet and Encapsulation
7.2 VPNs and the OSI Model
7.3 The Packet VPNs
7.3.1 PPTP
7.3.2 L2F
7.3.3 L2TP
7.3.4 ALTAVISTA TUNNEL
7.3.5 IPSec
7.3.6 SKIP
7.4 APPLICATION ORIENTED VPN PROTOCOLS
7.4.1 SECURE SHELL
7.4.2 SOCKS version 5 network security protocol
7.4.3 Sun.NET
7.5 Quality
of Service (QoS) Protocols and VPNs
7.6 CONCLUSION
CHAPTER 8 ARCHITECTURE
8.1 Software vs. Hardware Solutions
8.2 "Hiding" your
LAN
8.3 User Authentication
8.4 The Basic Scenarios
8.4.1 The Client to LAN VPN
8.4.2 The LAN to LAN VPN
8.5 Conclusion
CHAPTER 9 Planning Your VPN
9.1 Analyze Your Needs
9.1.1 Consider the Possibilities
9.1.2 Look at What you are doing Now.
9.2
Take a Detailed Inventory of Your Resources
9.2.1 Inventory Your Physical Resources.
9.2.2 Inventory Your Human Resources
9.2.3
Outsourced vs In House
9.3 Establish the Goals for Your VPN
9.4 Plan for the Evolution/Expansion of the Network
9.5 Begin to Sketch
Out a Budget
9.6 Study ALL Your Options
9.7 Develop an Architecture
9.7.1 A Review of the Protocols
9.8 A Review of the Protocols
9.8.1 IPSec is a Developing Industry Standard
9.8.2 PPTP and L2TP's Ready Availability
9.8.3 SKIP is being marginalized in the
market
9.8.4 AltaVista, SOCKS v.5, and Secure SHell are Niche Products.
9.8.5 Sun.NET is an unproved product.
9.9 Evaluate Products
and Vendors
9.10 Define a Pilot Project
9.11 Plan on a Phased Roll out
9.12 Conclusion
Chapter 10 Administration and management
10.1 Security
10.1.1 The First Line of Defense
10.1.2 Beware Back Doors
10.1.3 Security Through Obscurity
10.2 Keeping the VPN
Up
10.2.1 Service Level Agreements (SLAs)
10.2.2 Managing Performance on Your Part
10.3 Managing One Big Network
10.4 Conclusion
Bibliographic & ordering Information
Paperback, 350 pages, publication date: MAY-1999
ISBN-13: 978-1-55860-575-6
ISBN-10: 1-55860-575-4
Imprint: MORGAN KAUFFMAN
Price: Order form
EUR 46.95 GBP 32.99 USD 54.95
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Last update: 12 Jul 2008
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