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Date:      Sat, 13 Mar 1999 00:33:39 -0500
From:      "Christian Kuhtz" <ck@adsu.bellsouth.com>
To:        "Alfred Perlstein" <bright@rush.net>, "Doug White" <dwhite@resnet.uoregon.edu>
Cc:        <hackers@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   RE: Will IPFW pass GRE packets?
Message-ID:  <002c01be6d13$0cdc8f60$7aad98cd@oreo.adsu.bellsouth.com>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.3.96.990312232015.1330D-100000@cygnus.rush.net>

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> GRE is some windows NT thing?  If it is, someone has already figured this
> out for you, the lists have it.

GRE stands for "Generic Route Encapsulation" and is an IETF standard as
defined by RFC1701 (http://www.adsu.bellsouth.com/pub/ietf/rfc/rfc1701 and
RFC1702).  It is used to tunnel all sorts of things across IPv4 networks,
including IPv4 itself.  It has jack squat to do with NT.

Cisco IOS has probably the most implementations of using GRE for various
tunnels.  Not very many other vendors implement it (but now that Tony works
for Juniper, I'm sure they will too :).  Sometimes IPSec in tunnel mode is
used to provide GRE with encryption based security.

Cheers,
Chris

--
BellSouth Corporation, Advanced Data Services,  Sr. Network Architect
ck@adsu.bellsouth.com -wk, ck@gnu.org -hm
"Affiliation given for identification, not representation."



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