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Router Access
When you first install the JUNOS software, all
remote access to the router is disabled, thereby ensuring that remote
access is possible only if deliberately enabled by an authorized user.
You can establish remote communication with a router in one of the
following ways:
- Out-of-band management—Allows connection to the
router through an interface dedicated to router management. Juniper
Networks routing platforms support out-of-band management with a dedicated
management Ethernet interface (fxp0), as well as EIA-232
console and auxiliary ports. The management Ethernet interface connects
directly to the Routing Engine. No transit traffic is allowed through
this interface, providing complete separation of customer and management
traffic and ensuring that congestion or failures in the transit network
do not affect the management of the router.
- Inband management—Allows connection to the routers
using the same interfaces through which customer traffic flows. Although
this approach is simple and requires no dedicated management resources,
it has some disadvantages:
- Management flows and transit traffic flows are mixed together.
Any attack traffic that is mixed with the normal traffic can affect
the communication with the router.
- The links between router components might not be totally
trustworthy, leading to the possibility of wiretapping and replay
attacks.
For management access to the router, the standard
ways to communicate with the router from a remote console are with
Telnet and SSH. SSH provides secure encrypted communications and is
therefore useful for inband router management. Telnet provides unencrypted,
and therefore less secure, access to the router. For more information
about router access, see System Management.
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