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Virtual Private Networking (VPN) has been in use by Businesses to secure their employees
roaming internet connections to the office networks for years. A VPN is a private
network that uses a public network (usually the Internet) to connect remote sites
or users together privately. Instead of using a dedicated, physical connection such
as leased line, a VPN uses "virtual" connections routed through the Internet from
the company's private network to the remote site or employee. VPN connections encrypt
all transmitted data to prevent malicious programs, and people, from accessing your
personal information, or communications.
Virtual private networks are point-to-point connections across a private or public
network such as the Internet. A VPN client uses special TCP/IP-based protocols, called
tunneling protocols, to make a virtual call to a virtual port on a VPN server. In
a typical VPN deployment, a client initiates a virtual point-to-point connection
to a remote access server over the Internet. The remote access server answers the
call, authenticates the caller, and transfers data between the VPN client and the
organization’s private network.
To emulate a point-to-point link, data is encapsulated, or wrapped, with a header.
The header provides routing information that enables the data to traverse the shared
or public network to reach its endpoint. To emulate a private link, the data being
sent is encrypted for confidentiality. Packets that are intercepted on the shared
or public network are indecipherable without the encryption keys. The link in which
the private data is encapsulated and encrypted is known as a VPN connection.

Site-to-Site VPN
Site-to-site VPN connections (also known as router-to-router VPN connections) enable
organizations to have routed connections between separate offices or with other organizations
over a public network while helping to maintain secure communications. A routed VPN
connection across the Internet logically operates as a dedicated WAN link. When networks
are connected over the Internet, as shown in the following figure, a router forwards
packets to another router across a VPN connection. To the routers, the VPN connection
operates as a data-link layer link.
A site-to-site VPN connection connects two portions of a private network. The VPN
server provides a routed connection to the network to which the VPN server is attached.
The calling router (the VPN client) authenticates itself to the answering router
(the VPN server), and, for mutual authentication, the answering router authenticates
itself to the calling router. In a site-to site VPN connection, the packets sent
from either router across the VPN connection typically do not originate at the routers

There are two types of VPN connections:
- Remote access VPN
- Site-to-site VPN
Remote Access VPN
Remote access VPN connections enable users working at home or on the road to access
a server on a private network using the infrastructure provided by a public network,
such as the Internet. From the user’s perspective, the VPN is a point-to-point connection
between the computer (the VPN client) and an organization’s server. The exact infrastructure
of the shared or public network is irrelevant because it appears logically as if
the data is sent over a dedicated private link.
Virtual Private Networking (VPN) Service
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