allow PPTP client through Cisco ASA 8.4 to external PPTP server

In order to allow a PPTP VPN client through a Cisco ASA firewall in order to access an external PPTP server you need to add the following to your configuration.

policy-map global_policy

class inspection_default

inspect pptp

Allow access to DMZ or other remote Vlan over VPN tunnel on Cisco ASA 8.4

I recently needed to provide internal access to a DMZ Vlan at one of my remote sites over a VPN tunnel. The VPN tunnel was provided by 2 Cisco ASA 5505 firewalls both running ASA software versions more recent than 8.4. The LAN subnets in this example can be defined as follows:

Main Office Subnet:     10.0.10.0/24

Remote Office Subnet:     10.0.20.0/24

Remote Office DMZ Subnet:     192.168.20.0/24

This article assumes that you already have the site to site VPN tunnel set up between the main office (10.0.10.0/24) subnet and the remote office (10.0.20.0/24) subnet, and that you have already created a network object for your main office subnet called main-office-lan, and for your remote office subnet called remote-office-lan on both ASAs. It also assumes that your DMZ interface on the remote ASA is called ‘dmz‘, and that you have an ACL defining interesting VPN traffic called main-remote-vpn on both ASAs.

Firstly create a network object for the remote office DMZ on both the main office and remote office ASAs. In configuration mode add the following two commands

object network remote-office-dmz

subnet 192.168.20.0 255.255.255.0

Next create a network object group for the 2 subnets at your remote site on both the main office and remote office ASAs

object-group network remote-office-networks
network-object object remote-office-lan
network-object object remote-office-dmz

Next, on the remote office ASA exempt traffic from the remote office DMZ subnet, to main office subnet from Network Address Translation (NAT) on the outside interface. i.e. traffic that will be travelling from the 192.168.20.0/24 to the 10.0.10.0/24 subnet over the VPN tunnel. In configuration mode add the following command:

nat (dmz,outside) source static remote-office-dmz remote-office-dmz destination static main-office-lan main-office-lan

Then on the remote office ASA change the ACL that defines interesting traffic for your site to site vpn tunnel (in this case called main-remote-vpn) to include the the dmz subnet, by using the network object group that you created earlier:

access-list main-remote-vpn extended permit ip object-group remote-office-networks object main-office-lan

Next you need to modify the configuration of the main office ASA to exempt traffic travelling over the VPN tunnel to the remote office DMZ from NAT, and also add the remote office subnet to the ACL that defines interesting traffic for your site to site VPN tunnel:

Modify the NAT rule on the main office ASA in config mode:

nat (inside,outside) source static main-office-lan main-office-lan destination static remote-office-networks remote-office-networks

Then modify the ACL that defines your site to site VPN traffic in config mode:

access-list main-remote-vpn extended permit ip object main-office-lan object-group remote-office-networks

Thats it, you should now be able to connect to hosts in the DMZ at you remote site over your site to site VPN connection. If you have multiple site to site VPNs from your main office network you may need to tweak this config , but the theory is the same.

PLEASE NOTE: This configuration will allow hosts in the DMZ at your remote site to connect to any hosts in your main office network! Clearly in most cases this will not be desirable, unless the additional remote Vlan is not a DMZ and performs some other function, which is not exposed directly to the Internet (which was the situation in my case). In any event you may wish to use VPN filters  to restrict traffic from the remote DMZ Vlan to your main office, or by disabling sysopt connection permit-vpn using the no sysopt connection permit-vpn command and applying ACLs to your outside interface. Excercise caution when applying either of these types of filtering to make sure you don’t restrict yourself from the site to site VPN tunnel.

Advertisement

Cisco ASA (8.4) to PIX (6.x) Site to Site VPN example

Here is a basic example of a site to site VPN between a Cisco ASA firewall running version 8.3 or higher, and a Cisco PIX firewall running version 6.x

Configuration for the Cisco ASA side of the connection:

Define network objects for your internal subnets:

object network Main-Office
subnet 192.168.1.0 255.255.255.0

object network Branch-Office
subnet 192.168.2.0 255.255.255.0

Create an access list for the VPN traffic using the network objects that you have created:

access-list VPN-to-Branch-Office extended permit ip object Main-Office object Branch-Office

Use double NAT (effictively no nat) to ensure the traffic travelling across the VPN tunnel will not have NAT applied to it:

nat (inside,outside) source static Main-Office Main-Office destination static Branch-Office Branch-Office

Create a transform set using the encryption of your choice, in this case AES 128:

crypto ipsec ikev1 transform-set myset-aes128 esp-aes esp-sha-hmac

Ensure IKE version 1 is enabled on the outside interface:

crypto ikev1 enable outside

Create a policy for phase 1 of the VPN connection:

crypto ikev1 policy 10
authentication pre-share
encryption aes
hash sha
group 5
lifetime 86400

Configure a tunnel group containing the Pre Shared Key:

tunnel-group 172.16.0.2 type ipsec-l2l
tunnel-group 172.16.0.2 ipsec-attributes
ikev1 pre-shared-key My53cr3tPSK

Create a crypto map for phase 2 of the VPN connection:

crypto map myvpnmap 10 match address VPN-to-Branch-Office
crypto map myvpnmap 10 set pfs group5
crypto map myvpnmap 10 set peer 172.16.0.2            (This should be set to the ip of the outside interface of the PIX you are connecting to)
crypto map myvpnmap 10 set ikev1 transform-set myset-aes128
crypto map myvpnmap interface outside

 

Configuration for the Cisco PIX side of the connection:

Configure an access list for the VPN tunnel:

access-list 100 permit ip 192.168.2.0 255.255.255.0 192.168.1.0 255.255.255.0

Make sure NAT is not applied to traffic passing across the VPN tunnel:

nat (inside) 0 access-list 100

Configure the PIX to permit IPSEC:

sysopt connection permit-ipsec

Create a policy for phase 1 of the VPN connection:

isakmp enable outside

isakmp policy 10 authentication pre-share
isakmp policy 10 encryption aes
isakmp policy 10 hash sha
isakmp policy 10 group 5
isakmp policy 10 lifetime 86400

Configure keepalives to match the default setting on the ASA of 10 seconds retry 2 seconds:

isakmp keepalive 10

Create a transform set to match the ASA end of the connection, in this case AES 128:

crypto ipsec transform-set myset-aes128 esp-aes esp-sha-hmac

Create a crypto map for phase 2 of the VPN connection:

crypto map myvpnmap 10 ipsec-isakmp
crypto map myvpnmap 10 match address 100
crypto map myvpnmap 10 set pfs group5
crypto map myvpnmap 10 set peer 172.168.0.1               (This should be set to the ip of the outside interface of the ASA you are connecting to)
crypto map myvpnmap 10 set transform-set myset-aes128
crypto map myvpnmap interface outside

Configure the Pre Shared Key to match the other end of the connection

isakmp key My53cr3tPSK address 172.16.0.1 netmask 255.255.255.255 no-xauth no-config-mode