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Mastering OpenVPN

You're reading from   Mastering OpenVPN Master building and integrating secure private networks using OpenVPN

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783553136
Length 364 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
Concepts
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Authors (2):
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Eric F Crist Eric F Crist
Author Profile Icon Eric F Crist
Eric F Crist
Jan Just Keijser Jan Just Keijser
Author Profile Icon Jan Just Keijser
Jan Just Keijser
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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to OpenVPN FREE CHAPTER 2. Point-to-point Mode 3. PKIs and Certificates 4. Client/Server Mode with tun Devices 5. Advanced Deployment Scenarios in tun Mode 6. Client/Server Mode with tap Devices 7. Scripting and Plugins 8. Using OpenVPN on Mobile Devices and Home Routers 9. Troubleshooting and Tuning 10. Future Directions Index

An overview of PKI

PKI is generally a hierarchical organization of encryption certificate and key pairs. Typically, as used with most websites, the top of the hierarchy is the CA. This is the root of the entire tree, and trust is rooted at this level. If the root is trusted, all the key pairs underlying will also be trusted. From the root-level CA, there can be client certificates, server certificates, sub-CAs, and certificate revocation lists (CRLs). Under each sub-CA, this list of possibilities repeats.

An overview of PKI

To use a PKI to its full potential, the users and systems need to trust the root CA, and any intermediate CAs in the chain. With most modern web browsers, the browser authors or vendors have vetted and approved a large list of root-level certificate authorities to trust by default. These authorities are generally commercial vendors such as VeriSign, Go Daddy, Comodo, Trend Micro, various government entities, and many others.

Due to this preapproved list for browsers, the vast majority...

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