Penguin

Differences between version 10 and predecessor to the previous major change of PPTP.

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Newer page: version 10 Last edited on Friday, June 4, 2004 9:22:37 am by CraigBox Revert
Older page: version 7 Last edited on Thursday, May 22, 2003 11:18:14 am by CraigBox Revert
@@ -1,11 +1,11 @@
 [Acronym] for Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol 
  
 A technology for creating Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) , developed jointly by MicrosoftCorporation, U.S. Robotics, and several remote access vendor companies, known collectively as the [PPTP] Forum. A [VPN] is a private network of computers that uses the public Internet to connect some nodes. Because the Internet is essentially an open network, the Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol ([PPTP]) is used to ensure that messages transmitted from one VPN node to another are "secure". With [PPTP], users can dial in to their corporate network via the Internet. 
  
-See PPTPServerHowTo
+See [PPTPServerHowto]
  
 If you want to support this under Linux, get [PoPToP|http://www.poptop.org/]. It starts a pppd in the correct place; you might be interested in the [MPPE] patches. 
  
 PPTP is a great way to get onto the MetaNet (or indeed, any local network) if you're away from it and all you have is a Windows machine. 
  
-For firewalling interests. PPTP uses [GRE] packets (protol 47) and a [TCP] connection on port 1723 for control. Most FireWall/[NAT] implementations don't understand the GRE connection identifier and thus will only support one PPTP connection, to a single PPTP server, when your connection is over NAT. Linux 2.4 doesn't seem to have this problem. 
+For firewalling interests. PPTP uses [GRE] packets (protol 47) and a [TCP] connection on port 1723 for control. Most FireWall/[NAT] implementations don't understand the GRE connection identifier and thus will only support one PPTP connection, to a single PPTP server, when your connection is over NAT. Linux 2.4 doesn't seem to have this problem. See [PPTPConnectionTracking] for details