Re: [CentOS] I want to connect to a l2tp server from centos.

2017-03-22 Thread Eliezer Croitoru
Thanks!

Eliezer


Eliezer Croitoru
Linux System Administrator
Mobile: +972-5-28704261
Email: elie...@ngtech.co.il



-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf
Of Gordon Messmer
Sent: Monday, September 21, 2015 9:46 PM
To: CentOS mailing list <centos@centos.org>
Subject: Re: [CentOS] I want to connect to a l2tp server from centos.

On 09/20/2015 05:50 PM, Eliezer Croitoru wrote:
> I do not have any security issue in this network.
> I need to connect to a remote network on a secure network.
> The options are pptp or l2tp(no ipsec encryption) so I do want to use 
> l2tp like in (lac\lns) and I am looking for a client for CentOS.

The client is "xl2tpd", and you can find it in EPEL.

Client setup is described here:
http://www.xinotes.net/notes/note/1524/
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Re: [CentOS] I want to connect to a l2tp server from centos.

2015-09-21 Thread Gordon Messmer

On 09/20/2015 05:50 PM, Eliezer Croitoru wrote:

I do not have any security issue in this network.
I need to connect to a remote network on a secure network.
The options are pptp or l2tp(no ipsec encryption) so I do want to use 
l2tp like in (lac\lns) and I am looking for a client for CentOS. 


The client is "xl2tpd", and you can find it in EPEL.

Client setup is described here:
http://www.xinotes.net/notes/note/1524/
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Re: [CentOS] I want to connect to a l2tp server from centos.

2015-09-20 Thread Eliezer Croitoru

Hey Gordon,

I do not have any security issue in this network.
I need to connect to a remote network on a secure network.
The options are pptp or l2tp(no ipsec encryption) so I do want to use 
l2tp like in (lac\lns) and I am looking for a client for CentOS.
Note that it works in ubuntu so it is possible to achieve the same with 
CentOS but I do not know what is behind the gui that initiates the 
connection for l2tp.

With pptp I have no issue and I have a connection which works a lot of time.

Thanks,
Eliezer

On 18/09/2015 03:57, Gordon Messmer wrote:

On 09/17/2015 04:47 PM, Eliezer Croitoru wrote:

If someone used l2tp the same way I want to use on CentOS 7 please
give me some advice.


l2tp, by itself, offers no encryption.  Notably, that means that your
password is going to cross the network in clear text.  Bare l2tp is the
VPN equivalent of telnet.  I really strongly recommend that you reconsider.

ipsec, by itself, is a much better and easier way to achieve your goal.
It will require less setup, and offer better security. There's no down
side; ipsec is clearly a better choice for connecting two systems over
an unsecured network.

l2tp is typically used in conjunction with ipsec, for mobile clients.
The reason is that l2tp integrates with external authentication (RADIUS,
LDAP, Active Directory, etc) better than ipsec alone does.  That's great
when you have a group of users that you want to have individual
authentication keys, but it's not a good fit for connecting one server
to another.
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Re: [CentOS] I want to connect to a l2tp server from centos.

2015-09-18 Thread Eliezer Croitoru
OK So i took the time and finally built a RPM for the softether vpn 
server and client.
I have not tested them for usage but I found out that only the server 
side can work with multiple protocols while the client side works only 
with one protocol.

The actual protocol is called "ethernet overl HTTPS".
More info on the product:
http://www.softether.org/

The gui is only for windows as far as I could understand.

So no l2tp client there but aleast a nice VPN service.

SRPM can be found here:
http://ngtech.co.il/rpm/centos/7/SRPMS/softethervpn-4.18.9570-2.el7.centos.src.rpm

The repo is here(also latest squid-cache repo):
http://ngtech.co.il/rpm/centos/7/x86_64/

Eliezer

On 18/09/2015 04:33, Eliezer Croitoru wrote:

Hey John,

I do not require encryption at all, it's a secure and internal channel
but it requires me to connect via either pptp or l2tp.
This is the reason I am asking.
I had the chance of finding the SoftEther Project which gives a lot in
terms of VPN Client and Server.
At:
http://www.softether-download.com/en.aspx

But yet to try it.
Also they have all sorts of beta versions but not something they call
stable in their downloads.

I think I will try to use their product if I will not find an example on
how to use l2tp without ipsec encryption.

Thanks,
Eliezer

On 18/09/2015 03:00, John R Pierce wrote:

On 9/17/2015 4:47 PM, Eliezer Croitoru wrote:

I have a server currently connecting to a pptp remote server.
This server(lns\lac) has the option for pptp connections and l2tp
connections.
The l2tp connections are not using ipsec encryption at all.


PPTP doesn't use ipsec either, it uses its own MPPE encryption based on
RC4, which is considered insecure as of years ago.

L2TP is normally used within another encrypted transport.


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Re: [CentOS] I want to connect to a l2tp server from centos.

2015-09-18 Thread Richard Zimmerman
-Original Message-
From: centos-boun...@centos.org [mailto:centos-boun...@centos.org] On Behalf Of 
Eliezer Croitoru
Sent: Friday, September 18, 2015 2:21 AM
To: centos@centos.org
Subject: Re: [CentOS] I want to connect to a l2tp server from centos.

http://www.softether.org/>

   For what it's worth, it runs just fine downloading and running it directly. 
I will agree, they usually only release beta versions so we hang back one or 
two beta's from the latest. In my case SoftEther VPN "just works". I will say 
if you are new to VPN's as I was (and still learning) it'll drive you nuts at 
times setting things up to make it all mesh together. Router tables, firewall 
rules, etc. Once your golden, you can literally forget how it works. Yup, took 
plenty of notes. (Hopefully they are good enough :) )

   We have a remote office and my home lan VPN'd into the server (All CentOS 
6.7 boxen) on a virtual hub. My remote users (Windows only so far) VPN in on a 
separate virtual hub and so far it has gone well. Kudos to SoftEther VPN for a 
double click to start, double click to stop a VPN connection in Windows!

   I also wrote a script to setup the tap interfaces, routing table entries and 
do several test pings to make sure the links setup correctly. This was done 
because softEther VPN would be ready to go before the TAP interfaces were up 
and ready and caused issues.

   My smartphone users can connect via l2tp/IPsec but no one (including me) 
wants to mess with it. It would be really nice if the SoftEther VPN folks would 
write a smartphone client. 



   Yes the GUI is Windows only (as far as I know) but works well no matter what 
platform the server is running well.




   Because my employer has AT Fiber/PNT/firewall/VPN services (read software 
defined networking) I'm actually happy my main support is SSL-VPN (via https) 
Makes my life a lot easier. It's to the point our company has decided NOT to 
use the AT global network client in favor of SoftEther VPN for our remote 
needs.

Kind regards,

Richard



SRPM can be found here:
http://ngtech.co.il/rpm/centos/7/SRPMS/softethervpn-4.18.9570-2.el7.centos.src.rpm

The repo is here(also latest squid-cache repo):
http://ngtech.co.il/rpm/centos/7/x86_64/

Eliezer





---
Richard Zimmerman
Systems / Network Administrator
River Bend Hose Specialty, Inc.
 S Main Street
South Bend, IN   46601-3337
(574) 233-1133
(574) 280-7284 Fax

On 18/09/2015 04:33, Eliezer Croitoru wrote:
> Hey John,
>
> I do not require encryption at all, it's a secure and internal channel 
> but it requires me to connect via either pptp or l2tp.
> This is the reason I am asking.
> I had the chance of finding the SoftEther Project which gives a lot in 
> terms of VPN Client and Server.
> At:
> http://www.softether-download.com/en.aspx
>
> But yet to try it.
> Also they have all sorts of beta versions but not something they call 
> stable in their downloads.
>
> I think I will try to use their product if I will not find an example 
> on how to use l2tp without ipsec encryption.
>
> Thanks,
> Eliezer
>
> On 18/09/2015 03:00, John R Pierce wrote:
>> On 9/17/2015 4:47 PM, Eliezer Croitoru wrote:
>>> I have a server currently connecting to a pptp remote server.
>>> This server(lns\lac) has the option for pptp connections and l2tp 
>>> connections.
>>> The l2tp connections are not using ipsec encryption at all.
>>
>> PPTP doesn't use ipsec either, it uses its own MPPE encryption based 
>> on RC4, which is considered insecure as of years ago.
>>
>> L2TP is normally used within another encrypted transport.
>
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Re: [CentOS] I want to connect to a l2tp server from centos.

2015-09-17 Thread Eliezer Croitoru

Hey John,

I do not require encryption at all, it's a secure and internal channel 
but it requires me to connect via either pptp or l2tp.

This is the reason I am asking.
I had the chance of finding the SoftEther Project which gives a lot in 
terms of VPN Client and Server.

At:
http://www.softether-download.com/en.aspx

But yet to try it.
Also they have all sorts of beta versions but not something they call 
stable in their downloads.


I think I will try to use their product if I will not find an example on 
how to use l2tp without ipsec encryption.


Thanks,
Eliezer

On 18/09/2015 03:00, John R Pierce wrote:

On 9/17/2015 4:47 PM, Eliezer Croitoru wrote:

I have a server currently connecting to a pptp remote server.
This server(lns\lac) has the option for pptp connections and l2tp
connections.
The l2tp connections are not using ipsec encryption at all.


PPTP doesn't use ipsec either, it uses its own MPPE encryption based on
RC4, which is considered insecure as of years ago.

L2TP is normally used within another encrypted transport.


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Re: [CentOS] I want to connect to a l2tp server from centos.

2015-09-17 Thread Gordon Messmer

On 09/17/2015 04:47 PM, Eliezer Croitoru wrote:
If someone used l2tp the same way I want to use on CentOS 7 please 
give me some advice. 


l2tp, by itself, offers no encryption.  Notably, that means that your 
password is going to cross the network in clear text.  Bare l2tp is the 
VPN equivalent of telnet.  I really strongly recommend that you reconsider.


ipsec, by itself, is a much better and easier way to achieve your goal.  
It will require less setup, and offer better security. There's no down 
side; ipsec is clearly a better choice for connecting two systems over 
an unsecured network.


l2tp is typically used in conjunction with ipsec, for mobile clients.  
The reason is that l2tp integrates with external authentication (RADIUS, 
LDAP, Active Directory, etc) better than ipsec alone does.  That's great 
when you have a group of users that you want to have individual 
authentication keys, but it's not a good fit for connecting one server 
to another.

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Re: [CentOS] I want to connect to a l2tp server from centos.

2015-09-17 Thread John R Pierce

On 9/17/2015 4:47 PM, Eliezer Croitoru wrote:

I have a server currently connecting to a pptp remote server.
This server(lns\lac) has the option for pptp connections and l2tp 
connections.
The l2tp connections are not using ipsec encryption at all. 


PPTP doesn't use ipsec either, it uses its own MPPE encryption based on 
RC4, which is considered insecure as of years ago.


L2TP is normally used within another encrypted transport.



--
john r pierce, recycling bits in santa cruz

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