ZyWALL 70 User’s Guide
Chapter 14 VPN Screens
241
• Choose an authentication algorithm.
• Choose a Diffie-Hellman public-key cryptography key group (
DH1
or
DH2
)
.
• Set the IKE SA lifetime. This field allows you to determine how long an IKE SA should
stay up before it times out. An IKE SA times out when the IKE SA lifetime period
expires. If an IKE SA times out when an IPSec SA is already established, the IPSec SA
stays connected.
In phase 2 you must:
• Choose which protocol to use (
ESP
or
AH
) for the IKE key exchange.
• Choose an encryption algorithm.
• Choose an authentication algorithm
• Choose whether to enable Perfect Forward Secrecy (PFS) using Diffie-Hellman public-
key cryptography – see
. Select
None
(the default) to disable
PFS.
• Choose
Tunnel
mode or
Transport
mode.
• Set the IPSec SA lifetime. This field allows you to determine how long the IPSec SA
should stay up before it times out. The ZyWALL automatically renegotiates the IPSec SA
if there is traffic when the IPSec SA lifetime period expires. The ZyWALL also
automatically renegotiates the IPSec SA if both IPSec routers have keep alive enabled,
even if there is no traffic. If an IPSec SA times out, then the IPSec router must renegotiate
the SA the next time someone attempts to send traffic.
14.8.1 Negotiation Mode
The phase 1
Negotiation Mode
you select determines how the Security Association (SA) will
be established for each connection through IKE negotiations.
•
Main Mode
ensures the highest level of security when the communicating parties are
negotiating authentication (phase 1). It uses 6 messages in three round trips: SA
negotiation, Diffie-Hellman exchange and an exchange of nonces (a nonce is a random
number). This mode features identity protection (your identity is not revealed in the
negotiation).
•
Aggressive Mode
is quicker than
Main Mode
because it eliminates several steps when
the communicating parties are negotiating authentication (phase 1). However the trade-
off is that faster speed limits its negotiating power and it also does not provide identity
protection. It is useful in remote access situations where the address of the initiator is not
know by the responder and both parties want to use pre-shared key authentication.
14.8.2 Pre-Shared Key
A pre-shared key identifies a communicating party during a phase 1 IKE negotiation. It is
called pre-shared because you have to share it with another party before you can communicate
with them over a secure connection.
Summary of Contents for ZyWALL 70
Page 1: ...ZyWALL 70 Internet Security Appliance User s Guide Version 3 64 3 2005 ...
Page 2: ......
Page 38: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 38 List of Figures ...
Page 46: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 46 List of Tables ...
Page 74: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 74 Chapter 2 Introducing the Web Configurator ...
Page 92: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 92 Chapter 3 Wizard Setup ...
Page 102: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 102 Chapter 4 LAN Screens ...
Page 108: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 108 Chapter 5 Bridge Screens ...
Page 130: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 130 Chapter 6 Wireless LAN ...
Page 136: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 136 Chapter 7 WAN Screens Figure 45 WAN General ...
Page 155: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide Chapter 7 WAN Screens 155 Figure 55 Dial Backup Setup ...
Page 234: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 234 Chapter 13 Introduction to IPSec ...
Page 275: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide Chapter 15 Certificates 275 Figure 125 My Certificate Details ...
Page 294: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 294 Chapter 16 Authentication Server Figure 136 Local User Database ...
Page 314: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 314 Chapter 17 Network Address Translation NAT ...
Page 318: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 318 Chapter 18 Static Route ...
Page 324: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 324 Chapter 19 Policy Route ...
Page 340: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 340 Chapter 20 Bandwidth Management ...
Page 376: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 376 Chapter 22 Remote Management ...
Page 390: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 390 Chapter 24 Logs Screens Figure 194 Log Settings ...
Page 413: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide Chapter 25 Maintenance 413 Figure 216 Restart Screen ...
Page 414: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 414 Chapter 25 Maintenance ...
Page 440: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 440 Chapter 28 WAN and Dial Backup Setup ...
Page 456: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 456 Chapter 31 DMZ Setup ...
Page 460: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 460 Chapter 32 Route Setup ...
Page 470: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 470 Chapter 33 Remote Node Setup ...
Page 522: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 522 Chapter 39 System Information Diagnosis ...
Page 538: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 538 Chapter 40 Firmware and Configuration File Maintenance ...
Page 550: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 550 Chapter 42 Remote Management ...
Page 558: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 558 Chapter 43 IP Policy Routing ...
Page 573: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide Chapter 45 Troubleshooting 573 Figure 360 Java Sun ...
Page 574: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 574 Chapter 45 Troubleshooting ...
Page 582: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 582 Appendix B Removing and Installing a Fuse ...
Page 602: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 602 Appendix D IP Subnetting ...
Page 608: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 608 Appendix F PPTP ...
Page 626: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 626 Appendix H Triangle Route ...
Page 656: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 656 Appendix K Importing Certificates ...
Page 658: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 658 Appendix L Command Interpreter ...
Page 664: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 664 Appendix M Firewall Commands ...
Page 668: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 668 Appendix N NetBIOS Filter Commands ...
Page 674: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 674 Appendix P Brute Force Password Guessing Protection ...
Page 696: ...ZyWALL 70 User s Guide 696 Appendix R Log Descriptions ...