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  2. Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Layer_2_Tunneling_Protocol

    The two endpoints of an L2TP tunnel are called the L2TP access concentrator (LAC) and the L2TP network server (LNS). The LNS waits for new tunnels. Once a tunnel is established, the network traffic between the peers is bidirectional.

  3. VyOS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VyOS

    VPN and Tunneling: IPsec, VTI, VXLAN, L2TPv3, L2TP/IPsec and PPTP servers, tunnel interfaces (GRE, IPIP, SIT), OpenVPN in client, server, or site-to-site modes, WireGuard. Firewall and NAT: Stateful firewall based on nftables, zone-based firewall, all types of source and destination NAT (one to one, one to many, many to many), NAT64/DNS64.

  4. Vyatta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vyatta

    The free community Vyatta Core software (VC) was an open source network operating system providing advanced IPv4 and IPv6 routing, stateful firewalling, secure communication through both an IPSec based VPN as well as through the SSL based OpenVPN.

  5. L2TPv3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L2TPv3

    Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol version 3 is an IETF standard related to L2TP that can be used as an alternative protocol to Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) for encapsulation of multiprotocol Layer 2 communications traffic over IP networks. [1] Like L2TP, L2TPv3 provides a pseudo-wire service, but scaled to fit carrier requirements.

  6. Tunneling protocol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunneling_protocol

    In computer networks, a tunneling protocol is a communication protocol which allows for the movement of data from one network to another. They can, for example, allow private network communications to be sent across a public network (such as the Internet), or for one network protocol to be carried over an incompatible network, through a process called encapsulation.

  7. TUN/TAP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TUN/TAP

    TUN and TAP in the network stack. Though both are for tunneling purposes, TUN and TAP cannot be used together because they transmit and receive packets at different layers of the network stack.

  8. SoftEther VPN - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SoftEther_VPN

    SoftEther VPN is free open-source, cross-platform, multi-protocol VPN client and VPN server software, developed as part of Daiyuu Nobori's master's thesis research at the University of Tsukuba. VPN protocols such as SSL VPN, L2TP/IPsec, OpenVPN, and Microsoft Secure Socket Tunneling Protocol are provided in a single VPN server.

  9. VTun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VTun

    VTun connections are initiated via a TCP connection from the client to the server. The server then initiates a UDP connection to the client, if the UDP protocol is requested. The software allows the creation of tunnels, for routing traffic in a manner similar to PPP, as well as a bridge-friendly ethertap connection.