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Private Network Interconnection VPN - Virtual Private Networks NAT - Network Address Translation Describe a 2-level internet architecture Private internet connected by public internet/Internet © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 1 Private/Hybrid Networks Major drawback to single level architecture -> lack of privacy 2 levels distinguish between internal and external datagrams Goal is to keep internal datagrams private while still allowing external communications © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 2 Private Networks Easiest way to guarantee privacy is completely private network aka private network Use routers to interconnect networks at each site and leased digital circuits to interconnect sites Since no outside access can use own IP addressing scheme © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 3 Hybrid Networks Gives advantages of both private and and global Internet connectivity Must use globally valid IP addresses Connect each site to the Internet See hybrid architecture in figure 20.1 on page 390 © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 4 VPN Chief disadvantage of both private and hybrid networks is high cost leased lines (T1+) are expensive Can lower cost by using alternative technologies (frame relay, ATM) or simply connect to the global Internet Connecting to global Internet could remove privacy © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 5 VPN Big Question - How to keep the privacy but keep Internet connectivity? Two techniques make VPN possible Tunneling Encryption Define a tunnel across the Internet between a router on one side and a router on the other Use IP-in-IP encapsulation in tunnel © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 6 VPN See tunnel figure 20.2 on page 391 Entire inner datagram including the IP header is encrypted before being placed as the data in the outer datagram Describe flow “A VPN sends data across the Internet, but encrypts intersite transmissions to guarantee privacy” page 392 © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 7 VPN Addressing Offers an organization same addressing as private network if hosts do not need Internet connectivity If hosts need Internet connectivity then hybrid approach can be used In either case the routers that interface with the Internet always need valid IP addresses See figure 20.4 on page 393 © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 8 VPN Addressing How can a host provide access to the global Internet without assigning each host a valid IP address? 2 general methods Application Gateways Network Address Translation © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 9 Application Gateways Offers hosts access to Internet services without offering IP level access Each site has a multi-homed host with a connection to both the Internet and the private network MHH runs a set of programs called Application Gateways © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 10 Application Gateways Each AG handles 1 service Hosts send datagrams to AG on MHH MHH accesses the service on the Internet MHH relays responses back to host on private network Example: E-mail gateway © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 11 Application Gateways Advantage - ability to work without changing underlying structure of private network Disadvantage - lack of generality “Each application gateway handles only one specific service; multiple gateways are required for multiple services.” AGs do NOT solve problem in a general way © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 12 NAT Requires a site to have a single connection to the Internet and one valid IP address G G assigned to a MHH connected to the Internet that runs NAT software A computer running NAT software is known as a NAT Box All datagrams flow through NAT box © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 13 NAT NAT translates both outgoing and incoming addresses Outgoing Replace source address with G Incoming Replace destination address with private address of host © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 14 NAT External view - All datagrams come from and go to the NAT box Internal view - NAT box appears as a router to the Internet Chief advantage - Combination of generality and transparency © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 15 NAT More general than AGs - Allows arbitrary internal host to access arbitrary service on a host on the Internet Transparency - Allows internal host to send and receive datagrams using a private IP address “NAT technology provides transparent IP-level access to the Internet from a host with a private address.” © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 16 NAT Translation Each entry specifies 2 items IP address of host on Internet IP address of host on private network Example incoming/outgoing Table must be in place before datagram arrives in from Internet Why? © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 17 NAT Translation How/When is table initialized Manual - network administrator Outgoing Datagrams - sie effect of sending datagrams Incoming DNS lookup - side effect of DNS lookup When host on Internet does a DNS lookup of internal host, DNS software creates entry in translation table then answers request by sending G © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 18 NAT Translation Manual Advantage - IP datagrams in either direction any time Outgoing Advantage - Automatic Disadvantage – Comm. can’t be initialized by outside Incoming DNS lookups Requires modifying DNS software Accommodates initiating communication from outside Only works if DNS used © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 19 NAT Mot implementations use outgoing method Example on figure 20.5 on page 396 NAT permits ISP to assign private addresses © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 20 Multi-Address NAT NAT described so far allows a single host on private network to access a single Internet site What if 2 local hosts want to access single Internet host? External Address Concurrency © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 21 Multi-Address NAT Assign NAT box multiple Gs Multiple accesses of same Internet host maps different Gs Still finite number of concurrent accesses © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 22 Port-Mapped NAT Translate TCP or UDP protocol port numbers too Sometimes known as Network Address Port Translation (NAPT) Additional table fields Pair of source/destination protocol port numbers Protocol port number used by NAT box © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 23 Port-Mapped NAT See figure 20.6 on page 397 10.0.0.5 and 10.0.0.1 have unique source port numbers but this is NOT guaranteed Maybe they choose same number - application can select it To avoid - NAT assigns unique port number to each Internet communication © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 24 Port-Mapped NAT TCP 4-tuple to represent IP address and port number Before sending (10.0.0.5,21023,128.10.19.20,80) (10.0.0.1,386,128.10.19.20,80) After NAPT translation (G,14003,128.10.19.20,80) (G,14010,128.10.19.20,80) © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 25 Port-Mapped NAT Advantage - Generality with single valid IP address Disadvantage - Restricts use to TCP or UDP “Several variants of NAT exist, including the popular NAPT form that translates protocol port numbers as well as IP addresses.” © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 26 NAT and ICMP “Straight-forward” changes to IP addresses can cause unexpected problems in higher layer protocols NAT doesn’t forward all ICMP messages arriving from Internet Example - If routes in NAT box are incorrect, an ICMP redirect message must be handled locally not sent internally to some other host Before forwarding to internal host NAT translates ICMP message © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 27 NAT and ICMP So, NAT must decide whether ICMP message to be forwarded in or handled locally ICMP destination unreachable message IP header returned containing source address but G is in it not internal source © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 28 NAT and ICMP NAT box must first translate address and place it into the ICMP message ICMP Checksum in now incorrect and one in datagram outer header!!!! This must now be recomputed © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 29 NAT and Applications Pure NAPT doesn’t work with applications that send IP addresses and port numbers as data FTP - TCP application One program obtains port number on local machine, converts it to ASCII and sends it to other host to create TCP connection © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 30 NAT and Applications NAPT would need to inspect all data and translate as needed for every application protocol as it is designed! NAT supports main application protocol such as FTP and Telnet but not all Certainly © MMII JW Ryder not out home grown applications CS 428 Computer Networking 31 Summary VPNs guarantee privacy but are expensive 2 main technologies used to implement VPN Application Gateways NAT © MMII JW Ryder CS 428 Computer Networking 32