Avaya Configuring and Troubleshooting Bay Dial VPN (DVS) Networks Manual de usuario Pagina 25

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Tunneling Overview
303509-A Rev 00 1-5
How a Dial VPN Network Functions
Any authorized remote user (using a PC or dial-up router) who has access to a
phone line and a modem can dial into your network through Dial VPN. A remote
node can be an individual user dialing in or a dial-up router (using IP) through a
public-switched telephone network (PSTN) or an ISDN connection. A remote
user can dial in to a Dial VPN network to connect either to a corporate or home
network or to a third-party ISP. Dial VPN regards these as functionally equivalent.
Figure 1-2
is a simplified illustration of one possible Layer 3 Dial VPN
configuration. In reality, a Dial VPN service provider’s network might include
several remote access servers to service a variety of dial-in users, with both Layer
3 and Layer 2 tunnels serving different types of networks. You can configure Dial
VPN so that its operation is transparent both to users and applications. You may
find it useful to draw a map of your own configuration and label the interfaces
with their IP and, if appropriate, frame relay Data Link Connection Identifier
(DLCI) addresses.
Table 1-1. Layer 3 and Layer 2 Dial VPN Feature Implementation
Dial VPN Feature Layer 3 Layer 2
Tunnel management
erpcd
, ACP, or
RADIUS (BSAC)
erpcd
, ACP, or RADIUS
(BSAC)
Protocol Mobile IP L2TP
Encapsulation GRE L2TP
Tunnel end points NAS and gateway LAC and LNS
Dynamic IP address
allocation
IP pooling or DHCP IP pooling
Layer 3 protocols
supported
IP, IPX IP
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