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Usage of IPsec Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) in Tunnel and Transport modes. The IP Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) [22] was developed at the Naval Research Laboratory starting in 1992 as part of a DARPA-sponsored research project, and was openly published by IETF SIPP [23] Working Group drafted in December 1993 as a security ...
Establishment of Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) communication in transport mode. The IP protocol number for ESP is 50 (compare TCP's 6 and UDP's 17). At this point, a secure channel has been established, but no tunneling is taking place. Negotiation and establishment of L2TP tunnel between the SA endpoints.
Generic Routing Encapsulation: RFC 2784, RFC 2890: 0x30 48 DSR Dynamic Source Routing Protocol RFC 4728: 0x31 49 BNA Burroughs Network Architecture 0x32 50 ESP Encapsulating Security Payload: RFC 4303: 0x33 51 AH Authentication Header: RFC 4302: 0x34 52 I-NLSP Integrated Net Layer Security Protocol: TUBA 0x35 53 SwIPe SwIPe: RFC 5237: 0x36 54 NARP
Tunneling a TCP-encapsulating payload (such as PPP) over a TCP-based connection (such as SSH's port forwarding) is known as "TCP-over-TCP", and doing so can induce a dramatic loss in transmission performance — known as the TCP meltdown problem [6] [7] which is why virtual private network (VPN) software may instead use a protocol simpler than ...
Standard Mobility support: There is a standard extension for IKEv2 named [rfc:4555 Mobility and Multihoming Protocol] (MOBIKE) (see also, IPsec) used to support mobility and multihoming for it and Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP). By use of this extension IKEv2 and IPsec can be used by mobile and multihomed users.
ESP Encapsulating Security Payload over IP or IPSec; FCP Fibre Channel Protocol; NetBIOS NetBIOS, File Sharing and Name Resolution; IL Originally developed as transport layer for 9P; iSCSI Internet Small Computer System Interface; NBF NetBIOS Frames protocol; SCTP Stream Control Transmission Protocol; Sinec H1 for telecontrol; TUP, Telephone ...
Generic routing encapsulation (GRE) is a tunneling protocol developed by Cisco Systems that can encapsulate a wide variety of network layer protocols inside virtual point-to-point links or point-to-multipoint links over an Internet Protocol network.
SAs contain all the information required for execution of various network security services, such as the IP layer services (such as header authentication and payload encapsulation), transport or application layer services or self-protection of negotiation traffic. ISAKMP defines payloads for exchanging key generation and authentication data.