Is Possible to Registrar a MAC Address in a VPN


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Special Forums IP Networking Is Possible to Registrar a MAC Address in a VPN
# 1  
Old 11-06-2009
Is Possible to Registrar a MAC Address in a VPN

Hi Gurus, I have a question:
I have a connection VPN to my Branch Office, but some day the Network administrator send an e-mail and he tell me that I must be disconnected the VPN. But In that moment I don't use the VPN, Someone was coneccted to the VPN I think.
The Question is:
I want to know if exist a System or tecnology that when you access a VPN, the firewall (or equipment that manage the VPN) register the MAC address of the Station/PC that use the VPN?
For example If someone know my user/pass of my VPN can do anything in my branch Office, and the Network Administrator would think that I do it. When I'm not the person that use the VPN.
Thantk gurus for your suggestions or advice
Andres
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. IP Networking

MAC Address - Four Interfaces with the same MAC Address

four interfaces with ifconfig all interfaces have the same mac. If is not set for unique. but it still works. what difference does it make to have all macs the same or different? (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: rrodgers
4 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Need help explaining how to use a VPN on a UNIX server with a Mac OS

I have gotten a gig to teach someone how to use a VPN client for a UNIX server on a MAC os. The problem is I have never used UNIX, dont mess with VPN's (my dad has a VPN that I have used a couple of times). I'm currently taking a crash course on UNIX but I was wondering if anyone could help me with... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: psycopuppy
0 Replies

3. IP Networking

Tracing a MAC address to IP address: Solaris

Hi there I lost connectivity to one of our remote systems and when I checked the messages log I found the following: Aug 10 23:42:34 host xntpd: time reset (step) 1.681729 s Aug 16 13:20:51 host ip: WARNING: node "mac address" is using our IP address x.x.x.x on aggr1 Aug 16 13:20:51 host... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: notreallyhere
9 Replies

4. SCO

MAC address

hi every one please help i want to change mac address in sco unix 5.0.6 how can i do this (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: kaydream
3 Replies

5. Solaris

Get ip address from mac address

I have following message in my messages file on solaris 10 WARNING: e1000g3712000:3 has duplicate address 010.022.196.011 (in use by 00:50:56:85:25:ef); disabled Now is there any way i can find which server has 00:50:56:85:25:ef mac address either IP or Hostname ? (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: fugitive
6 Replies

6. IP Networking

How do I find my IP address when connecting via VPN.

I connect to my client's network via VPN. We have a UNIX box there & I would like to know IP address of my PC when I connect to UNIX box using Putty software. I checked this command - /usr/sbin/ifconfig -a and it showed me the output lo0: flags=1000849<UP,LOOPBACK,RUNNING,MULTICAST,IPv4> mtu 8232... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: gppande
4 Replies

7. IP Networking

How to Achive IP address through MAC(Ethernet) address

Hi sir, i want to make such programe which takes MAC(Ethernet) address of any host & give me its IP address....... but i'm nt getting that how i can pass the MAC address to Frame........ Please give me an idea for making such program... Thanks & regards Krishna (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: krishnacins
3 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Mac address

Hi Can some one help me How do find out Mac address in Tru64 Unix Thank you (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Syed_45
1 Replies

9. Programming

Get Mac Address

:( Hi I am trying to get Mac address of of my Sun server from my C program running on the host machine. Any suggestions . (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ss_hpov
1 Replies
Login or Register to Ask a Question
GVPE(5) 						   GNU Virtual Private Ethernet 						   GVPE(5)

NAME
GNU-VPE - Overview of the GNU Virtual Private Ethernet suite. DESCRIPTION
GVPE is a suite designed to provide a virtual private network for multiple nodes over an untrusted network. This document first gives an introduction to VPNs in general and then describes the specific implementation of GVPE. WHAT IS A VPN? VPN is an acronym, it stands for: Virtual Virtual means that no physical network is created (of course), but a network is emulated by creating multiple tunnels between the member nodes by encapsulating and sending data over another transport network. Usually the emulated network is a normal IP or Ethernet, and the transport network is the Internet. However, using a VPN system like GVPE to connect nodes over other untrusted networks such as Wireless LAN is not uncommon. Private Private means that non-participating nodes cannot decode ("sniff)" nor inject ("spoof") packets. This means that nodes can be connected over untrusted networks such as the public Internet without fear of being eavesdropped while at the same time being able to trust data sent by other nodes. In the case of GVPE, even participating nodes cannot sniff packets send to other nodes or spoof packets as if sent from other nodes, so communications between any two nodes is private to those two nodes. Network Network means that more than two parties can participate in the network, so for instance it's possible to connect multiple branches of a company into a single network. Many so-called "VPN" solutions only create point-to-point tunnels, which in turn can be used to build larger networks. GVPE provides a true multi-point network in which any number of nodes (at least a few dozen in practise, the theoretical limit is 4095 nodes) can participate. GVPE DESIGN GOALS SIMPLE DESIGN Cipher, HMAC algorithms and other key parameters must be selected at compile time - this makes it possible to only link in algorithms you actually need. It also makes the crypto part of the source very transparent and easy to inspect, and last not least this makes it possible to hardcode the layout of all packets into the binary. GVPE goes a step further and internally reserves blocks of the same length for all packets, which virtually removes all possibilities of buffer overflows, as there is only a single type of buffer and it's always of fixed length. EASY TO SETUP A few lines of config (the config file is shared unmodified between all hosts) and a single run of gvpectrl to generate the keys suffices to make it work. MAC-BASED SECURITY Since every host has it's own private key, other hosts cannot spoof traffic from this host. That makes it possible to filter packet by MAC address, e.g. to ensure that packets from a specific IP address come, in fact, from a specific host that is associated with that IP and not from another host. PROGRAMS
Gvpe comes with two programs: one daemon (gvpe) and one control program (gvpectrl). gvpectrl This program is used to generate the keys, check and give an overview of of the configuration and to control the daemon (restarting etc.). gvpe This is the daemon used to establish and maintain connections to the other network nodes. It should be run on the gateway of each VPN subnet. COMPILETIME CONFIGURATION
Please have a look at the gvpe.osdep(5) manpage for platform-specific information. Gvpe hardcodes most encryption parameters. While this reduces flexibility, it makes the program much simpler and helps making buffer overflows impossible under most circumstances. Here are a few recipes for compiling your gvpe, showing the extremes (fast, small, insecure OR slow, large, more secure), between which you should choose: AS LOW PACKET OVERHEAD AS POSSIBLE ./configure --enable-hmac-length=4 --enable-rand-length=0 Minimize the header overhead of VPN packets (the above will result in only 4 bytes of overhead over the raw ethernet frame). This is a insecure configuration because a HMAC length of 4 makes collision attacks based on the birthday paradox pretty easy. MINIMIZE CPU TIME REQUIRED ./configure --enable-cipher=bf --enable-digest=md4 Use the fastest cipher and digest algorithms currently available in gvpe. MD4 has been broken and is quite insecure, though, so using another digest algorithm is recommended. MAXIMIZE SECURITY ./configure --enable-hmac-length=16 --enable-rand-length=8 --enable-digest=sha1 This uses a 16 byte HMAC checksum to authenticate packets (I guess 8-12 would also be pretty secure ;) and will additionally prefix each packet with 8 bytes of random data. In the long run, people should move to SHA-256 and beyond). In general, remember that AES-128 seems to be as secure but faster than AES-192 or AES-256, more randomness helps against sniffing and a longer HMAC helps against spoofing. MD4 is a fast digest, SHA1, RIPEMD160, SHA256 are consecutively better, and Blowfish is a fast cipher (and also quite secure). HOW TO SET UP A SIMPLE VPN
In this section I will describe how to get a simple VPN consisting of three hosts up and running. STEP 1: configuration First you have to create a daemon configuration file and put it into the configuration directory. This is usually /etc/gvpe, depending on how you configured gvpe, and can be overwritten using the -c command line switch. Put the following lines into /etc/gvpe/gvpe.conf: udp-port = 50000 # the external port to listen on (configure your firewall) mtu = 1400 # minimum MTU of all outgoing interfaces on all hosts ifname = vpn0 # the local network device name node = first # just a nickname hostname = first.example.net # the DNS name or IP address of the host node = second hostname = 133.55.82.9 node = third hostname = third.example.net The only other file necessary is the if-up script that initializes the virtual ethernet interface on the local host. Put the following lines into /etc/gvpe/if-up and make it executable (chmod 755 /etc/gvpe/if-up): #!/bin/sh ip link set $IFNAME address $MAC mtu $MTU up [ $NODENAME = first ] && ip addr add 10.0.1.1 dev $IFNAME [ $NODENAME = second ] && ip addr add 10.0.2.1 dev $IFNAME [ $NODENAME = third ] && ip addr add 10.0.3.1 dev $IFNAME ip route add 10.0.0.0/16 dev $IFNAME This script will give each node a different IP address in the 10.0/16 network. The internal network (if gvpe runs on a router) should then be set to a subset of that network, e.g. 10.0.1.0/24 on node first, 10.0.2.0/24 on node second, and so on. By enabling routing on the gateway host that runs gvpe all nodes will be able to reach the other nodes. You can, of course, also use proxy ARP or other means of pseudo-bridging, or (best) full routing - the choice is yours. STEP 2: create the RSA key pairs for all hosts Run the following command to generate all key pairs for all nodes (that might take a while): gvpectrl -c /etc/gvpe -g This command will put the public keys into /etc/gvpe/pubkeys/nodename and the private keys into /etc/gvpe/hostkeys/nodename. STEP 3: distribute the config files to all nodes Now distribute the config files and private keys to the other nodes. This should be done in two steps, since only the private keys meant for a node should be distributed (so each node has only it's own private key). The example uses rsync-over-ssh First all the config files without the hostkeys should be distributed: rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe first.example.net:/etc/. --exclude hostkeys rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe 133.55.82.9:/etc/. --exclude hostkeys rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe third.example.net:/etc/. --exclude hostkeys Then the hostkeys should be copied: rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe/hostkeys/first first.example.net:/etc/hostkey rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe/hostkeys/second 133.55.82.9:/etc/hostkey rsync -avzessh /etc/gvpe/hostkeys/third third.example.net:/etc/hostkey You should now check the configuration by issuing the command gvpectrl -c /etc/gvpe -s on each node and verify it's output. STEP 4: starting gvpe You should then start gvpe on each node by issuing a command like: gvpe -D -l info first # first is the nodename This will make the gvpe daemon stay in foreground. You should then see "connection established" messages. If you don't see them check your firewall and routing (use tcpdump ;). If this works you should check your networking setup by pinging various endpoints. To make gvpe run more permanently you can either run it as a daemon (by starting it without the -D switch), or, much better, from your inittab or equivalent. I use a line like this on all my systems: t1:2345:respawn:/opt/gvpe/sbin/gvpe -D -L first >/dev/null 2>&1 STEP 5: enjoy ... and play around. Sending a -HUP (gvpectrl -kHUP) to the daemon will make it try to connect to all other nodes again. If you run it from inittab, as is recommended, gvpectrl -k (or simply killall gvpe) will kill the daemon, start it again, making it read it's configuration files again. SEE ALSO
gvpe.osdep(5) for OS-dependent information, gvpe.conf(5), gvpectrl(8), and for a description of the transports, protocol, and routing algorithm, gvpe.protocol(7). The GVPE mailing list, at <http://lists.schmorp.de/>, or gvpe@lists.schmorp.de. AUTHOR
Marc Lehmann <gvpe@schmorp.de> COPYRIGHTS AND LICENSES
GVPE itself is distributed under the GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE (see the file COPYING that should be part of your distribution). In some configurations it uses modified versions of the tinc vpn suite, which is also available under the GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE. 2.2 2008-09-01 GVPE(5)