Traffic going over your VPN through the Internet is encrypted
and encapsulated in the ESP protocol on your Cisco router and is routed with
all other internet traffic.
Since the IP address you are coming from (172.20.29.x) is an RFC
1918 address, it cannot be routed on the internet by itself without being
either NATed or encapsulated, in your case the ESP encapsulation will use the
registered IP address of your router as the source address and the peer address
of the other end of the VPN as its destination IP address.
If you sniff the traffic coming and going from your Cisco router
out to the internet, you will see this encrypted traffic in the ESP packets.
john
From:
wireshark-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:wireshark-users-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Jeff Bruns
Sent: Friday, April 30, 2010 1:08 PM
To: Community support list for Wireshark
Subject: [Wireshark-users] Sniffing the WAN side of a VPN
We are part of a mid-sized VPN, one of several dozen
physical locations scattered across the Washington, DC metropolitan area. Each
site is part of a VPN provided by Comcast and has an address schema of
172.20.x.x/28. The incoming internet connection is from a coax cable to a
Comcast cable modem. From the modem, an ethernet cable connects to a Cisco 2800
series router. Network devices are then connected to the various ports on the
Cisco box.
My question is related to the visible traffic between the comcast modem and the
router. Specifically, I'm wondering if since we're part of a VPN, if sniffing
the connection between the modem and the router would allow us to see traffic
which may be destined to other sites within our VPN.
For example, lets say the gateway address on our local network is
172.20.28.129. The next site's gateway address would be 172.20.29.129, the next
172.20.30.129 and so on. If I sniff between the modem and the router, would I
be able to see traffic heading to the other various private gateways within my
VPN?
My knowledge of VPN networking is relatively slim, so the answer may hold no
relevance to wireshark. I understand that a VPN is provided by your ISP, so I
suppose it may vary depending on ISP. I wonder just how isolated a VPN is
amongst the rest of the internet. Does only traffic belonging to, or
originating from the VPN get routed to the cable modem, and from there,
filtered by the router according to destination address? Or could traffic be
routed at a higher level somewhere within the ISP, routing only traffic
destined for my local network (172.20.28.129/28)
to the modem and thus the router?
Thanks for the help.