ZyXEL Communications HW-D Series User Manual

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P-662H/HW-D Series User’s Guide
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Chapter 16 VPN Screens
16.7  VPN, NAT, and NAT Traversal
NAT is incompatible with the AH protocol in both transport and tunnel mode. An IPSec VPN 
using the AH protocol digitally signs the outbound packet, both data payload and headers, 
with a hash value appended to the packet, but a NAT device between the IPSec endpoints 
rewrites the source or destination address. As a result, the VPN device at the receiving end 
finds a mismatch between the hash value and the data and assumes that the data has been 
maliciously altered.
NAT is not normally compatible with ESP in transport mode either, but the ZyXEL Device’s 
NAT Traversal feature provides a way to handle this. NAT traversal allows you to set up an 
IKE SA when there are NAT routers between the two IPSec routers.
Figure 130   NAT Router Between IPSec Routers
Normally you cannot set up an IKE SA with a NAT router between the two IPSec routers 
because the NAT router changes the header of the IPSec packet. NAT traversal solves the 
problem by adding a UDP port 500 header to the IPSec packet. The NAT router forwards the 
IPSec packet with the UDP port 500 header unchanged. In 
IPSec router A tries to establish an IKE SA, IPSec router B checks the UDP port 500 header, 
and IPSec routers A and B build the IKE SA.
For NAT traversal to work, you must:
• Use ESP security protocol (in either transport or tunnel mode).
• Use IKE keying mode.
• Enable NAT traversal on both IPSec endpoints.
• Set the NAT router to forward UDP port 500 to IPSec router A.
Finally, NAT is compatible with ESP in tunnel mode because integrity checks are performed 
over the combination of the "original header plus original payload," which is unchanged by a 
NAT device. The compatibility of AH and ESP with NAT in tunnel and transport modes is 
summarized in the following table.
Table 89   VPN and NAT
SECURITY PROTOCOL
MODE
NAT
AH
Transport
N
AH
Tunnel
N
ESP
Transport
Y*
ESP
Tunnel
Y