Your company has a branch sales office that has several remote sales personnel who need to connect to your iSeries™ server. You also connect to your corporate office located in another state. Because the information that is transmitted between these areas of your company is sensitive, you are concerned about protecting it as it is sent across the Internet. Use this scenario to configure connections to remote clients and servers.
You are the network administrator for a branch sales office that manages several mobile sales employees. You also work with the corporate office located in another state. Both the remote sales personnel and the corporate office need access to your internal network; however, you are concerned about protecting information as it is transmitted over the Internet.
The corporate office often needs access to sensitive information like customer accounts and billing statements. Your mobile sales employees transmit information to your branch sales office by dialing an Internet service provider (ISP) through the Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP). Because they also transmit sensitive information, you need to ensure data integrity and privacy in these communications. You do not want sensitive credit card numbers or customer contact information exposed to the Internet. After researching your options for both groups of users, you have decided to use a virtual private network (VPN) to protect your connections to the corporate office and to use Layer Two Tunnel Protocol (L2TP) protected with a VPN for your remote employees.
The administrators for MyCo, Inc have the following objectives:
The following network topology shows the connections between a branch sales office and a corporate headquarters and remote sales personnel. Connections to the branch sales office are protected through a VPN. The following descriptions of each part of this network provide details on their configuration.
This scenario provides an example VPN configuration between a branch sales office and a corporate office. It also provides instructions on how to configure remote access for travelling sales people connecting to the branch office. This scenario assumes that several prerequisite steps have been completed and tested, and are operational before beginning these configuration steps. These prerequisites are assumed to have been completed for this scenario:
In addition to these prerequisites, it is assumed that both networks have set up and activated filter rules on their networks, configured routing, and established an IP addressing scheme. If you have not completed these tasks, see the following topics: IP filtering and network address translation (NAT) and TCP/IP routing and workload balancing.