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VPN Overview

A virtual private network (VPN) consists of two topological areas: the provider’s network and the customer’s network. The customer’s network is commonly located at multiple physical sites and is also private (non-Internet). A customer site would typically consist of a group of routers or other networking equipment located at a single physical location. The provider’s network, which runs across the public Internet infrastructure, consists of routers that provide VPN services to a customer’s network as well as routers that provide other services. The provider’s network connects the various customer sites in what appears to the customer and the provider to be a private network.

To ensure that VPNs remain private and isolated from other VPNs and from the public Internet, the provider’s network maintains policies that keep routing information from different VPNs separate. A provider can service multiple VPNs as long as its policies keep routes from different VPNs separate. Similarly, a customer site can belong to multiple VPNs as long as it keeps routes from the different VPNs separate.

This chapter discusses the following topics that provide background information about VPNs:


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