ZyXEL Communications 70 Series User Manual

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ZyWALL 5/35/70 Series User’s Guide
Chapter 19 VPN Screens
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• Choose an authentication algorithm.
• Choose a Diffie-Hellman public-key cryptography key group (DH1 or DH2).
• Set the IKE SA lifetime. This field allows you to determine how long an IKE SA should 
stay up before it times out. An IKE SA times out when the IKE SA lifetime period 
expires. If an IKE SA times out when an IPSec SA is already established, the IPSec SA 
stays connected.
In phase 2 you must:
• Choose which protocol to use (ESP or AH) for the IKE key exchange.
• Choose an encryption algorithm.
• Choose an authentication algorithm
• Choose whether to enable Perfect Forward Secrecy (PFS) using Diffie-Hellman public-
key cryptography – see 
. Select None (the default) to disable 
PFS.
• Choose Tunnel mode or Transport mode.
• Set the IPSec SA lifetime. This field allows you to determine how long the IPSec SA 
should stay up before it times out. The ZyWALL automatically renegotiates the IPSec SA 
if there is traffic when the IPSec SA lifetime period expires. The ZyWALL also 
automatically renegotiates the IPSec SA if both IPSec routers have keep alive enabled, 
even if there is no traffic. If an IPSec SA times out, then the IPSec router must renegotiate 
the SA the next time someone attempts to send traffic.
19.8.1  Negotiation Mode
The phase 1 Negotiation Mode you select determines how the Security Association (SA) will 
be established for each connection through IKE negotiations. 
• Main Mode ensures the highest level of security when the communicating parties are 
negotiating authentication (phase 1). It uses 6 messages in three round trips: SA 
negotiation, Diffie-Hellman exchange and an exchange of nonces (a nonce is a random 
number). This mode features identity protection (your identity is not revealed in the 
negotiation). 
• Aggressive Mode is quicker than Main Mode because it eliminates several steps when 
the communicating parties are negotiating authentication (phase 1). However the trade-
off is that faster speed limits its negotiating power and it also does not provide identity 
protection. It is useful in remote access situations where the address of the initiator is not 
know by the responder and both parties want to use pre-shared key authentication.
19.8.2  Pre-Shared Key
A pre-shared key identifies a communicating party during a phase 1 IKE negotiation. It is 
called pre-shared because you have to share it with another party before you can communicate 
with them over a secure connection.