Asa 96 VPN Config
Asa 96 VPN Config
Asa 96 VPN Config
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CONTENTS
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Enable Application Access on Clientless SSL VPN Sessions for a Group Policy 311
Configure the Port-Forwarding Display Name 312
Configure the Maximum Object Size to Ignore for Updating the Session Timer 312
Specify HTTP Compression 313
Configure Clientless SSL VPN Access for Specific Users 313
Specify the Content/Objects to Filter from the HTML 315
Specify the User Home Page 315
Specify a Deny Message 316
Apply a URL List 316
Enable ActiveX Relay for a User 317
Enable Application Access for Clientless SSL VPN Sessions 317
Configure the Port-Forwarding Display Name 318
Configure the Maximum Object Size to Ignore for Updating the Session Timer 318
Configure Auto-Signon 319
Specify HTTP Compression 319
Smart Tunnel Access 320
About Smart Tunnels 321
Prerequisites for Smart Tunnels 321
Guidelines for Smart Tunnels 322
Add Applications to Be Eligible for Smart Tunnel Access 323
About Smart Tunnel Lists 323
Configure and Apply Smart Tunnel Policy 324
Configure and Apply a Smart Tunnel Tunnel-Policy 325
Create a Smart Tunnel Auto Sign-On Server List 326
Add Servers to a Smart Tunnel Auto Sign-On Server List 327
Automate Smart Tunnel Access 328
Enable and Switch Off Smart Tunnel Access 329
Configure Smart Tunnel Log Off 330
Configure Smart Tunnel Log Off when Its Parent Process Terminates 330
Configure Smart Tunnel Log Off with a Notification Icon 331
Clientless SSL VPN Capture Tool 331
Configure Portal Access Rules 332
Optimize Clientless SSL VPN Performance 333
Configure Caching 333
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Change a Group Policy or User Attributes to Use the Customization Object 391
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About This Guide
The following topics explain how to use this guide.
• Document Objectives, on page xix
• Related Documentation, on page xix
• Document Conventions, on page xix
• Communications, Services, and Additional Information, on page xxi
Document Objectives
The purpose of this guide is to help you configure VPN on the Adaptive Security Appliance (ASA) using the
command-line interface. This guide does not cover every feature, but describes only the most common
configuration scenarios.
You can also configure and monitor the ASA by using Adaptive Security Device Manager (ASDM), a
web-based GUI application. ASDM includes configuration wizards to guide you through some common
configuration scenarios, and online help for less common scenarios.
This guide applies to the Cisco ASA series. Throughout this guide, the term “ASA” applies generically to
supported models, unless specified otherwise.
Related Documentation
For more information, see Navigating the Cisco ASA Series Documentation at http://www.cisco.com/go/asadocs.
Document Conventions
This document adheres to the following text, display, and alert conventions.
Text Conventions
Convention Indication
boldface Commands, keywords, button labels, field names, and user-entered text appear
in boldface. For menu-based commands, the full path to the command is shown.
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About This Guide
Convention Indication
italic Variables, for which you supply values, are presented in an italic typeface.
Italic type is also used for document titles, and for general emphasis.
monospace Terminal sessions and information that the system displays appear in monospace
type.
!, # An exclamation point (!) or a number sign (#) at the beginning of a line of code
indicates a comment line.
Reader Alerts
This document uses the following for reader alerts:
Note Means reader take note. Notes contain helpful suggestions or references to material not covered in the manual.
Tip Means the following information will help you solve a problem.
Caution Means reader be careful. In this situation, you might do something that could result in equipment damage or
loss of data.
Timesaver Means the described action saves time. You can save time by performing the action described in the paragraph.
Warning Means reader be warned. In this situation, you might perform an action that could result in bodily injury.
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Communications, Services, and Additional Information
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Communications, Services, and Additional Information
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PA R T I
Site-to-Site and Client VPN
• IPsec and ISAKMP, on page 1
• L2TP over IPsec, on page 41
• General VPN Parameters, on page 51
• Connection Profiles, Group Policies, and Users, on page 77
• IP Addresses for VPNs, on page 171
• Remote Access IPsec VPNs, on page 179
• LAN-to-LAN IPsec VPNs, on page 193
• AnyConnect VPN Client Connections, on page 207
• AnyConnect HostScan, on page 229
• Easy VPN, on page 235
• Configure an External AAA Server for VPN, on page 243
CHAPTER 1
IPsec and ISAKMP
• About Tunneling, IPsec, and ISAKMP, on page 1
• Licensing for IPsec VPNs, on page 3
• Guidelines for IPsec VPNs, on page 4
• Configure ISAKMP, on page 4
• Configure IPsec, on page 17
• Managing IPsec VPNs, on page 38
The ASA functions as a bidirectional tunnel endpoint. It can receive plain packets from the private network,
encapsulate them, create a tunnel, and send them to the other end of the tunnel where they are unencapsulated
and sent to their final destination. It can also receive encapsulated packets from the public network,
unencapsulate them, and send them to their final destination on the private network.
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IPsec Overview
IPsec Overview
The ASA uses IPsec for LAN-to-LAN VPN connections and provides the option of using IPsec for
client-to-LAN VPN connections. In IPsec terminology, a peer is a remote-access client or another secure
gateway. For both connection types, the ASA supports only Cisco peers. Because we adhere to VPN industry
standards, ASAs can work with other vendors' peers; however, we do not support them.
During tunnel establishment, the two peers negotiate security associations that govern authentication, encryption,
encapsulation, and key management. These negotiations involve two phases: first, to establish the tunnel (the
IKE SA) and second, to govern traffic within the tunnel (the IPsec SA).
A LAN-to-LAN VPN connects networks in different geographic locations. In IPsec LAN-to-LAN connections,
the ASA can function as initiator or responder. In IPsec client-to-LAN connections, the ASA functions only
as responder. Initiators propose SAs; responders accept, reject, or make counter-proposals—all in accordance
with configured SA parameters. To establish a connection, both entities must agree on the SAs.
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Licensing for IPsec VPNs
• A Hashed Message Authentication Codes (HMAC) method to ensure the identity of the sender, and to
ensure that the message has not been modified in transit.
• A Diffie-Hellman group to determine the strength of the encryption-key-determination algorithm. The
ASA uses this algorithm to derive the encryption and hash keys.
• For IKEv2, a separate pseudo-random function (PRF) used as the algorithm to derive keying material
and hashing operations required for the IKEv2 tunnel encryption and so on.
• A limit to the time the ASA uses an encryption key before replacing it.
With IKEv1 policies, you set one value for each parameter. For IKEv2, you can configure multiple encryption
and authentication types, and multiple integrity algorithms for a single policy. The ASA orders the settings
from the most secure to the least secure and negotiates with the peer using that order. This ordering allows
you to potentially send a single proposal to convey all the allowed transforms instead of sending each allowed
combination as with IKEv1.
The ASA does not support IKEv2 multiple security associations (SAs). The ASA currently accepts inbound
IPsec traffic only on the first SA that is found. If IPsec traffic is received on any other SA, it is dropped with
reason vpn-overlap-conflict. Multiple IPsec SAs can come about from duplicate tunnels between two
peers, or from asymmetric tunneling.
Note If you clear or delete the only element in a transform set or proposal, the ASA automatically removes the
crypto map references to it.
IPsec remote access VPN using IKEv2 requires an AnyConnect Plus or Apex license, available separately.
IPsec remote access VPN using IKEv1 and IPsec site-to-site VPN using IKEv1 or IKEv2 uses the Other VPN
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Guidelines for IPsec VPNs
license that comes with the base license. See Cisco ASA Series Feature Licenses for maximum values per
model.
Failover Guidelines
IPsec VPN sessions are replicated in Active/Standby failover configurations only.
Configure ISAKMP
Configure IKEv1 and IKEv2 Policies
IKEv1 and IKEv2 each support a maximum of 20 IKE policies, each with a different set of values. Assign a
unique priority to each policy that you create. The lower the priority number, the higher the priority.
When IKE negotiations begin, the peer that initiates the negotiation sends all of its policies to the remote peer,
and the remote peer tries to find a match. The remote peer checks all of the peer's policies against each of its
configured policies in priority order (highest priority first) until it discovers a match.
A match exists when both policies from the two peers contain the same encryption, hash, authentication, and
Diffie-Hellman parameter values. For IKEv1, the remote peer policy must also specify a lifetime less than or
equal to the lifetime in the policy the initiator sent. If the lifetimes are not identical, the ASA uses the shorter
lifetime. For IKEv2 the lifetime is not negotiated but managed locally between each peer, making it possible
to configure lifetime independently on each peer. If no acceptable match exists, IKE refuses negotiation and
the SA is not established.
There is an implicit trade-off between security and performance when you choose a specific value for each
parameter. The level of security the default values provide is adequate for the security requirements of most
organizations. If you are interoperating with a peer that supports only one of the values for a parameter, your
choice is limited to that value.
You must include the priority in each of the ISAKMP commands. The priority number uniquely identifies
the policy and determines the priority of the policy in IKE negotiations.
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Configure IKEv1 and IKEv2 Policies
Procedure
Step 1 To create an IKE policy, enter the crypto ikev1 | ikev2 policy command from global configuration mode in
either single or multiple context mode. The prompt displays IKE policy configuration mode.
Example:
Note New ASA configurations do not have a default IKEv1 or IKEv2 policy.
hostname(config-ikev1-policy)# group 5
Step 6 Specify the SA lifetime. The default is 86400 seconds (24 hours).
lifetime seconds
Example:
This examples sets a lifetime of 4 hours (14400 seconds):
hostname(config-ikev1-policy)# lifetime 14400
Step 7 Specify additional settings using the IKEv1 and IKEv2 policy keywords and their values provided in IKE
Policy Keywords and Values, on page 6. If you do not specify a value for a given policy parameter, the
default value applies.
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IKE Policy Keywords and Values
hash sha (default) SHA-1 (HMAC variant) Specifies the hash algorithm
used to ensure data integrity. It
ensures that a packet comes
from where it says it comes
from and that it has not been
modified in transit.
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IKE Policy Keywords and Values
lifetime integer value 120 to 2147483647 seconds Specifies the SA lifetime. The
default is 86,400 seconds or 24
(86400 = default)
hours. As a general rule, a
shorter lifetime provides more
secure ISAKMP negotiations
(up to a point). However, with
shorter lifetimes, the ASA sets
up future IPsec SAs more
quickly.
integrity sha (default) SHA-1 (HMAC variant) Specifies the hash algorithm
used to ensure data integrity. It
ensures that a packet comes
from where it says it comes
from and that it has not been
modified in transit.
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IKE Policy Keywords and Values
prf sha (default) SHA-1 (HMAC variant) Specifies the pseudo random
function (PRF)—the algorithm
used to generate keying
material.
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Enable IKE on the Outside Interface
lifetime integer value 120 to 2147483647 seconds Specifies the SA lifetime. The
default is 86,400 seconds or 24
(86400 = default)
hours. As a general rule, a
shorter lifetime provides more
secure ISAKMP negotiations
(up to a point). However, with
shorter lifetimes, the ASA sets
up future IPsec SAs more
quickly.
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Disable IKEv1 Aggressive Mode
For example:
Note Disabling aggressive mode prevents Cisco VPN clients from using preshared key authentication to establish
tunnels to the ASA. However, they may use certificate-based authentication (that is, ASA or RSA) to establish
tunnels.
To disable aggressive mode, enter the following command in either single or multiple context mode:
If you have disabled aggressive mode, and want to revert back to it, use the no form of the command. For
example:
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INVALID_SELECTORS Notification
The ASA uses the Phase I ID to send to the peer. This is true for all VPN scenarios except LAN-to-LAN
IKEv1 connections in main mode that authenticate with preshared keys.
To change the peer identification method, enter the following command in either single or multiple context
mode:
crypto isakmp identity {address | hostname | key-id id-string | auto}
For example, the following command sets the peer identification method to hostname:
INVALID_SELECTORS Notification
If an IPsec system receives an inbound packet on an SA and the packet's header fields are not consistent with
the selectors for the SA, it MUST discard the packet. The audit log entry for this event includes the current
date/time, SPI, IPsec protocol(s), source and destination of the packet, any other vector values of the packet
that are available, and the selector values from the relevant SA entry. The system generates and sends an IKE
notification of INVALID_SELECTORS to the sender (IPsec peer), indicating that the received packet was
discarded because of failure to pass selector checks.
The ASA already implements the logging of this event in CTM using the existing syslog shown below:
%ASA-4-751027: IKEv2 Received INVALID_SELECTORS Notification from peer: <peer IP>. Peer
received a packet (SPI=<spi>) from <local_IP>. The decapsulated inner packet didn't match
the negotiated policy in the SA. Packet destination <pkt_daddr>, port <pkt_dest_port>,
source <pkt_saddr>, port <pkt_src_port>, protocol <pkt_prot>
An administrator can now enable or disable sending an IKEv2 notification to the peer when an inbound packet
is received on an SA that does not match the traffic selectors for that SA. If enabled, the IKEv2 notification
messages are rate limited to one notification message per SA every five seconds. The IKEv2 notification is
sent in an IKEv2 informational exchange to the peer.
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Configure IKEv2 Fragmentation Options
One of the following supported fragmentation methods can be configured as the preferred fragmentation
method for IKEv2 [preferred-method [ietf | cisco]]:
• IETF RFC-7383 standard based IKEv2 fragmentation.
• This method will be used when both peers specify support and preference during negotiation.
• Using this method, encryption is done after fragmentation providing individual protection for each
IKEv2 Fragment message.
• Cisco proprietary fragmentation.
• This method will be used if it is the only method provided by a peer, such as the AnyConnect client,
or if both peers specify support and preference during negotiation.
• Using this method fragmentation is done after encryption. The receiving peer cannot decrypt or
authenticate the message until all fragments are received.
• This method does not interoperate with non-Cisco peers.
The command show running-config crypto ikev2 will display the current configuration, and show crypto
ikev2 sa detail displays the MTU enforced if fragmentation was used for the SA.
Examples
• To disable IKEv2 fragmentation:
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AAA Authentication With Authorization
or
crypto ikev2 fragmentation mtu 576
preferred-method ietf
or
crypto ikev2 fragmentation preferred-method ietf
AAA authentication is performed against the LOCAL server using the username/password typed in by the
user. Additional authorization is performed against the radius server using the same username. service-type
attribute, if retrieved, is processed as described earlier.
Note Due to a limitation of the AnyConnect client, you must enable NAT-T for the AnyConnect client to successfully
connect using IKEv2. This requirement applies even if the client is not behind a NAT-T device.
The ASA can simultaneously support standard IPsec, IPsec over TCP, NAT-T, and IPsec over UDP, depending
on the client with which it is exchanging data.
The following breakdown shows the connections with each option enabled.
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Enable IPsec over NAT-T
Option 2 If IPsec over UDP is and client is behind NAT, IPsec over UDP is used
enabled then
Option 3 If both NAT-T and and client is behind NAT, NAT-T is used
then
IPsec over UDP are
enabled and no NAT exists, then IPsec over UDP is used
Note When IPsec over TCP is enabled, it takes precedence over all other connection methods.
When you enable NAT-T, the ASA automatically opens port 4500 on all IPsec-enabled interfaces.
The ASA supports multiple IPsec peers behind a single NAT/PAT device operating in LAN-to-LAN or remote
access networks, but not both. In a mixed environment, the remote access tunnels fail the negotiation because
all peers appear to be coming from the same public IP address, address of the NAT device. Also, remote
access tunnels fail in a mixed environment because they often use the same name as the LAN-to-LAN tunnel
group (that is, the IP address of the NAT device). This match can cause negotiation failures among multiple
peers in a mixed LAN-to-LAN and remote access network of peers behind the NAT device.
To use NAT-T, perform the following site-to-site steps in either single or multiple context mode:
Procedure
Step 1 Enter the following command to enable IPsec over NAT-T globally on the ASA:
crypto isakmp nat-traversal natkeepalive
The range for the natkeepalive argument is 10 to 3600 seconds. The default is 20 seconds.
Example:
Enter the following command to enable NAT-T and set the keepalive value to one hour:
Step 2 Select the before-encryption option for the IPsec fragmentation policy by entering this command:
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Enable IPsec with IKEv1 over TCP
This option lets traffic travel across NAT devices that do not support IP fragmentation. It does not impede
the operation of NAT devices that do support IP fragmentation.
IPsec over TCP works with remote access clients. You enable IPsec over TCP on both the ASA and the client
to which it connects. On the ASA, it is enabled globally, working on all IKEv1-enabled interfaces. It does
not work for LAN-to-LAN connections.
The ASA can simultaneously support standard IPsec, IPsec over TCP, NAT-Traversal, and IPsec over UDP,
depending on the client with which it is exchanging data. IPsec over TCP, if enabled, takes precedence over
all other connection methods.
You can enable IPsec over TCP for up to 10 ports that you specify. If you enter a well-known port, for example
port 80 (HTTP) or port 443 (HTTPS), the system displays a warning that the protocol associated with that
port no longer works on the public interface. The consequence is that you can no longer use a browser to
manage the ASA through the public interface. To solve this problem, reconfigure the HTTP/HTTPS
management to different ports.
The default port is 10000.
You must configure TCP port(s) on the client as well as on the ASA. The client configuration must include
at least one of the ports you set for the ASA.
To enable IPsec over TCP for IKEv1 globally on the ASA, perform the following command in either single
or multiple context mode:
crypto ikev1 ipsec-over-tcp [port port 1...port0]
This example enables IPsec over TCP on port 45:
Note Certificate group matching applies to IKEv1 and IKEv2 LAN-to-LAN connections only. IKEv2 remote access
connections support the pull-down group selection configured in the webvpn-attributes of the tunnel-group
and webvpn configuration mode for certificate-group-map, and so on.
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Configure Certificate Group Matching for IKEv1
To match users to tunnel groups based on these fields of the certificate, you must first create rules that define
a matching criteria, and then associate each rule with the desired tunnel group.
To create a certificate map, use the crypto ca certificate map command. To define a tunnel group, use the
tunnel-group command.
You must also configure a certificate group matching policy, specifying to match the group from the rules,
or from the organizational unit (OU) field, or to use a default group for all certificate users. You can use any
or all of these methods.
Procedure
Step 1 To configure the policy and rules by which certificate-based ISAKMP sessions map to tunnel groups, and to
associate the certificate map entries with tunnel groups, enter the tunnel-group-map command in either single
or multiple context mode.
tunnel-group-map enable {rules | ou | ike-id | peer ip}
tunnel-group-map [rule-index] enable policy
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Configure IPsec
• You can assign multiple rules to the same group. To do that, you add the rule priority and group first.
Then you define as many criteria statements as you need for each group. When multiple rules are assigned
to the same group, a match results for the first rule that tests true.
• By creating a single rule, you can require all criteria to match before assigning a user to a specific tunnel
group. Requiring all criteria to match is equivalent to a logical AND operation. Alternatively, create one
rule for each criterion if you want to require that only one match before assigning a user to a specific
tunnel group. Requiring only one criterion to match is equivalent to a logical OR operation.
Step 2 Specify a default tunnel group to use when the configuration does not specify a tunnel group.
The syntax is tunnel-group-map [rule-index] default-group tunnel-group-name where rule-index is the
priority for the rule, and tunnel-group name must be for a tunnel group that already exists.
Examples
The following example enables mapping of certificate-based ISAKMP sessions to a tunnel group
based on the content of the phase1 ISAKMP ID:
The following example enables mapping of certificate-based ISAKMP sessions to a tunnel group
based on the IP address of the peer:
The following example enables mapping of certificate-based ISAKMP sessions based on the
organizational unit (OU) in the subject distinguished name (DN):
The following example enables mapping of certificate-based ISAKMP sessions based on established
rules:
Configure IPsec
This section describes the procedures required to configure the ASA when using IPsec to implement a VPN.
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Define Crypto Maps
• Peer identification.
• Local address for the IPsec traffic. (See Apply Crypto Maps to Interfaces, on page 27 for more details.)
• Up to 11 IKEv1 transform sets or IKEv2 proposals, with which to attempt to match the peer security
settings.
A crypto map set consists of one or more crypto maps that have the same map name. You create a crypto map
set when you create its first crypto map. The following site-to-site task creates or adds to a crypto map in
either single or multiple context mode:
crypto map map-name seq-num match address access-list-name
Use the access-list-name to specify the ACL ID, as a string or integer up to 241 characters in length.
Tip Use all capital letters to more easily identify the ACL ID in your configuration.
You can continue to enter this command to add crypto maps to the crypto map set. In the following example,
mymap is the name of the crypto map set to which you might want to add crypto maps:
crypto map mymap 10 match address 101
The sequence number (seq-num) shown in the syntax above distinguishes one crypto map from another one
with the same name. The sequence number assigned to a crypto map also determines its priority among the
other crypto maps within a crypto map set. The lower the sequence number, the higher the priority. After you
assign a crypto map set to an interface, the ASA evaluates all IP traffic passing through the interface against
the crypto maps in the set, beginning with the crypto map with the lowest sequence number.
[no] crypto map map_name map_index set pfs [group1 | group2 | group5 | group14 | group19 | group20
| group21 | group24]
Specifies the ECDH group used for Perfect Forward Secrecy (PFS) for the cryptography map. Prevents you
from configuring group14 and group24 options for a cryptography map (when using an IKEv1 policy).
[no] crypto map map_name seq-num set reverse-route
Enables Reverse Route Injection (RRI) for any connection based on this crypto map entry. RRI is done upon
configuration and is considered static, remaining in place until the configuration changes or is removed. The
ASA automatically adds static routes to the routing table and announces these routes to its private network
or border routers using OSPF.
You cannot configure a dynamic crypto map with the same name as a static crypto map and vice versa, even
if one of the crypto maps is not actually in use.
[no] crypto map name priority set validate-icmp-errors
OR
[no]crypto dynamic-map name priority set validate-icmp-errors
Specifies whether incoming ICMP error messages are validated for the cryptography or dynamic cryptography
map.
[no] crypto map <name> <priority> set df-bit [clear-df | copy-df | set-df}
OR
[no] crypto map dynamic-map <name> <priority> set df-bit [clear-df | copy-df | set-df]
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Define Crypto Maps
Configures the existing do not fragment (DF) policy (at a security association level) for the cryptography or
dynamic cryptography map.
• clear-df—Ignores the DF bit.
• copy-df—Maintains the DF bit.
• set-df—Sets and uses the DF bit.
[no] crypto map <name> <priority> set tfc-packets [burst <length | auto] [payload-size <bytes | auto>
[timeout <seconds | auto>
OR
[no] crypto dynamic-map <name> <priority> set tfc-packets [burst <length | auto] [payload-size <bytes
| auto> [timeout <seconds | auto>
An administrator can enable dummy Traffic Flow Confidentiality (TFC) packets at random lengths and
intervals on an IPsec security association. You must have an IKEv2 IPsec proposal set before enabling TFC.
The ACL assigned to a crypto map consists of all of the ACEs that have the same ACL name, as shown in
the following command syntax:
access-list access-list-name {deny | permit} ip source source-netmask destination destination-netmask
You create an ACL when you create its first ACE. The following command syntax creates or adds to an ACL:
access-list access-list-name {deny | permit} ip source source-netmask destination destination-netmask
In the following example, the ASA applies the IPsec protections assigned to the crypto map to all traffic
flowing from the 10.0.0.0 subnet to the 10.1.1.0 subnet:
access-list 101 permit ip 10.0.0.0 255.255.255.0 10.1.1.0 255.255.255.0
The crypto map that matches the packet determines the security settings used in the SA negotiations. If the
local ASA initiates the negotiation, it uses the policy specified in the static crypto map to create the offer to
send to the specified peer. If the peer initiates the negotiation, the ASA attempts to match the policy to a static
crypto map, and if that fails, then it attempts to match any dynamic crypto maps in the crypto map set, to
decide whether to accept or reject the peer offer.
For two peers to succeed in establishing an SA, they must have at least one compatible crypto map. To be
compatible, a crypto map must meet the following criteria:
• The crypto map must contain compatible crypto ACLs (for example, mirror image ACLs). If the responding
peer uses dynamic crypto maps, so the ASA also must contain compatible crypto ACLs as a requirement
to apply IPsec.
• Each crypto map identifies the other peer (unless the responding peer uses dynamic crypto maps).
• The crypto maps have at least one transform set or proposal in common.
You can apply only one crypto map set to a single interface. Create more than one crypto map for a particular
interface on the ASA if any of the following conditions exist:
• You want specific peers to handle different data flows.
• You want different IPsec security to apply to different types of traffic.
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Example of LAN-to-LAN Crypto Maps
For example, create a crypto map and assign an ACL to identify traffic between two subnets and assign one
IKEv1 transform set or IKEv2 proposal. Create another crypto map with a different ACL to identify traffic
between another two subnets and apply a transform set or proposal with different VPN parameters.
If you create more than one crypto map for an interface, specify a sequence number (seq-num) for each map
entry to determine its priority within the crypto map set.
Each ACE contains a permit or deny statement. The following table explains the special meanings of permit
and deny ACEs in ACLs applied to crypto maps.
Match criterion in an ACE containing a permit Halt further evaluation of the packet against the
statement remaining ACEs in the crypto map set, and evaluate
the packet security settings against those in the IKEv1
transform sets or IKEv2 proposals assigned to the
crypto map. After matching the security settings to
those in a transform set or proposal, the ASA applies
the associated IPsec settings. Typically for outbound
traffic, this means that it decrypts, authenticates, and
routes the packet.
Match criterion in an ACE containing a deny Interrupt further evaluation of the packet against the
statement remaining ACEs in the crypto map under evaluation,
and resume evaluation against the ACEs in the next
crypto map, as determined by the next seq-num
assigned to it.
Fail to match all tested permit ACEs in the crypto Route the packet without encrypting it.
map set
ACEs containing deny statements filter out outbound traffic that does not require IPsec protection (for example,
routing protocol traffic). Therefore, insert initial deny statements to filter outbound traffic that should not be
evaluated against permit statements in a crypto ACL.
For an inbound, encrypted packet, the security appliance uses the source address and ESP SPI to determine
the decryption parameters. After the security appliance decrypts the packet, it compares the inner header of
the decrypted packet to the permit ACEs in the ACL associated with the packet SA. If the inner header fails
to match the proxy, the security appliance drops the packet. It the inner header matches the proxy, the security
appliance routes the packet.
When comparing the inner header of an inbound packet that was not encrypted, the security appliance ignores
all deny rules because they would prevent the establishment of a Phase 2 SA.
Note To route inbound, unencrypted traffic as clear text, insert deny ACEs before permit ACEs. ASA cannot push
more than 28 ACE in split-tunnel access-list.
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Example of LAN-to-LAN Crypto Maps
encryption and more frequent rekeying than the other traffic. So you will want to assign a special transform
set for traffic from Host A.3.
The simple address notation shown in this figure and used in the following explanation is an abstraction. An
example with real IP addresses follows the explanation.
To configure Security Appliance A for outbound traffic, you create two crypto maps, one for traffic from
Host A.3 and the other for traffic from the other hosts in Network A, as shown in the following example:
After creating the ACLs, you assign a transform set to each crypto map to apply the required IPsec to each
matching packet.
Cascading ACLs involves the insertion of deny ACEs to bypass evaluation against an ACL and resume
evaluation against a subsequent ACL in the crypto map set. Because you can associate each crypto map with
different IPsec settings, you can use deny ACEs to exclude special traffic from further evaluation in the
corresponding crypto map, and match the special traffic to permit statements in another crypto map to provide
or require different security. The sequence number assigned to the crypto ACL determines its position in the
evaluation sequence within the crypto map set.
The following illustration shows the cascading ACLs created from the conceptual ACEs in this example. The
meaning of each symbol is defined as follows: .
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Example of LAN-to-LAN Crypto Maps
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Example of LAN-to-LAN Crypto Maps
Security Appliance A evaluates a packet originating from Host A.3 until it matches a permit ACE and attempts
to assign the IPsec security associated with the crypto map. Whenever the packet matches a deny ACE, the
ASA ignores the remaining ACEs in the crypto map and resumes evaluation against the next crypto map, as
determined by the sequence number assigned to it. So in the example, if Security Appliance A receives a
packet from Host A.3, it matches the packet to a deny ACE in the first crypto map and resumes evaluation of
the packet against the next crypto map. When it matches the packet to the permit ACE in that crypto map, it
applies the associated IPsec security (strong encryption and frequent rekeying).
To complete the ASA configuration in the example network, we assign mirror crypto maps to ASAs B and
C. However, because ASAs ignore deny ACEs when evaluating inbound, encrypted traffic, we can omit the
mirror equivalents of the deny A.3 B and deny A.3 C ACEs, and therefore omit the mirror equivalents of
Crypto Map 2. So the configuration of cascading ACLs in ASAs B and C is unnecessary.
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Example of LAN-to-LAN Crypto Maps
The following table shows the ACLs assigned to the crypto maps configured for all three ASAs, A, B and C:
Crypto Map ACE Pattern Crypto Map ACE Pattern Crypto Map ACE Pattern
Sequence Sequence Sequence
No. No. No.
deny A.3 C
permit A B
2 permit A.3 B
permit A.3 C
The following illustration maps the conceptual addresses shown previously to real IP addresses.
The real ACEs shown in the following table ensure that all IPsec packets under evaluation within this network
receive the proper IPsec settings.
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Example of LAN-to-LAN Crypto Maps
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Set Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) Keys
You can apply the same reasoning shown in the example network to use cascading ACLs to assign different
security settings to different hosts or subnets protected by a ASA.
Note By default, the ASA does not support IPsec traffic destined for the same interface from which it enters. Names
for this type of traffic include U-turn, hub-and-spoke, and hairpinning. However, you can configure IPsec to
support U-turn traffic by inserting an ACE to permit traffic to and from the network. For example, to support
U-turn traffic on Security Appliance B, add a conceptual “permit B B” ACE to ACL1. The actual ACE would
be as follows: permit 192.168.12.0 255.255.255.248 192.168.12.0 255.255.255.248
Procedure
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Apply Crypto Maps to Interfaces
Note If you delete the only element in an ACL, the ASA also removes the associated crypto map.
If you modify an ACL currently referenced by one or more crypto maps, use the crypto map interface
command to reinitialize the run-time SA database. See the crypto map command for more information.
We recommend that for every crypto ACL specified for a static crypto map that you define at the local peer,
you define a “mirror image” crypto ACL at the remote peer. The crypto maps should also support common
transforms and refer to the other system as a peer. This ensures correct processing of IPsec by both peers.
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Use Interface ACLs
Note Every static crypto map must define an ACL and an IPsec peer. If either is missing, the crypto map is incomplete
and the ASA drops any traffic that it has not already matched to an earlier, complete crypto map. Use the
show conf command to ensure that every crypto map is complete. To fix an incomplete crypto map, remove
the crypto map, add the missing entries, and reapply it.
We discourage the use of the any keyword to specify source or destination addresses in crypto ACLs because
they cause problems. We strongly discourage the permit any any command statement because it does the
following:
• Protects all outbound traffic, including all protected traffic sent to the peer specified in the corresponding
crypto map.
• Requires protection for all inbound traffic.
In this scenario, the ASA silently drops all inbound packets that lack IPsec protection.
Be sure that you define which packets to protect. If you use the any keyword in a permit statement, preface
it with a series of deny statements to filter out traffic that would otherwise fall within that permit statement
that you do not want to protect.
Note Decrypted through traffic is permitted from the client despite having an access group on the outside interface,
which calls a deny ip any any access-list, while no sysopt connection permit-vpn is configured.
Users who want to control access to the protected network via site-to-site or remote access VPN using the no
sysopt permit command in conjunction with an access control list (ACL) on the outside interface are not
successful.
In this situation, when management-access inside is enabled, the ACL is not applied, and users can still connect
using SSH to the security appliance. Traffic to hosts on the inside network are blocked correctly by the ACL,
but cannot block decrypted through traffic to the inside interface.
The ssh and http commands are of a higher priority than the ACLs. In other words, to deny SSH, Telnet, or
ICMP traffic to the device from the VPN session, use ssh, telnet and icmp commands, which deny the IP
local pool should be added.
Regardless of whether the traffic is inbound or outbound, the ASA evaluates traffic against the ACLs assigned
to an interface. Follow these steps to assign IPsec to an interface:
Procedure
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Change IPsec SA Lifetimes
Example
In this example, IPsec protection applies to traffic between Host 10.0.0.1 and Host 10.2.2.2 as the
data exits the outside interface on ASA A toward Host 10.2.2.2.
ASA A also evaluates traffic from Host 10.2.2.2 to Host 10.0.0.1, as follows:
• source = host 10.2.2.2
• dest = host 10.0.0.1
The first permit statement that matches the packet under evaluation determines the scope of the
IPsec SA.
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Change VPN Routing
The peers negotiate a new SA before crossing the lifetime threshold of the existing SA to ensure that a new
SA is ready when the existing one expires. The peers negotiate a new SA when about 5 to 15 percent of the
lifetime of the existing SA remains.
Procedure
Example
Procedure
Step 1 To create an ACL to define the traffic to protect, enter the following command:
access-list access-list-name {deny | permit} ip source source-netmask destination destination-netmask
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Create Static Crypto Maps
The access-list-name specifies the ACL ID, as a string or integer up to 241 characters in length. The
destination-netmask and source-netmask specifies an IPv4 network address and subnet mask. In this example,
the permit keyword causes all traffic that matches the specified conditions to be protected by crypto.
Example:
Step 2 To configure an IKEv1 transform set that defines how to protect the traffic, enter the following command:
crypto ipsec ikev1 transform-set transform-set-name encryption [authentication]
Encryption specifies which encryption method protects IPsec data flows:
• esp-aes—Uses AES with a 128-bit key.
• esp-aes-192—Uses AES with a 192-bit key.
• esp-aes-256—Uses AES with a 256-bit key.\
• esp-des—Uses 56-bit DES-CBC.
• esp-3des—Uses triple DES algorithm.
• esp-null—No encryption.
Example:
In this example, myset1 and myset2 and aes_set are the names of the transform sets.
Step 3 To configure an IKEv2 proposal that also defines how to protect the traffic, enter the following command:
crypto ipsec ikev2 ipsec-proposal [proposal tag]
proposal tag is the name of the IKEv2 IPsec proposal, a string from 1 to 64 characters.
Create the proposal and enter the ipsec proposal configuration mode where you can specify multiple encryption
and integrity types for the proposal.
Example:
In this example, secure is the name of the proposal. Enter a protocol and encryption types:
Example:
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Create Static Crypto Maps
Step 4 (Optional) An administrator can enable path maximum transfer unit (PMTU) aging and set the interval at
which the PMTU value is reset to its original value.
[no] crypto ipsec security-association pmtu-aging reset-interval
Step 5 To create a crypto map, perform the following site-to-site steps using either single or multiple context mode:
a) Assign an ACL to a crypto map:
crypto map map-name seq-num match address access-list-name
A crypto map set is a collection of crypto map entries, each with a different sequence number (seq-num)
but the same map name. Use the access-list-name to specify the ACL ID, as a string or integer up to 241
characters in length. In the following example, mymap is the name of the crypto map set. The map set
sequence number 10, which is used to rank multiple entries within one crypto map set. The lower the
sequence number, the higher the priority.
Example:
In this example, the ACL named 101 is assigned to crypto map mymap.
The ASA sets up an SA with the peer assigned the IP address 192.168.1.100. Specify multiple peers by
repeating this command.
c) Specify which IKEv1 transform sets or IKEv2 proposals are allowed for this crypto map. List multiple
transform sets or proposals in order of priority (highest priority first). You can specify up to 11 transform
sets or proposals in a crypto map using either of these two commands:
crypto map map-name seq-num set ikev1 transform-set transform-set-name1 [transform-set-name2,
…transform-set-name11]
OR
crypto map map-name seq-num set ikev2 ipsec-proposal proposal-name1 [proposal-name2, …
proposal-name11]
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Proposal-name1 and proposal-name11 specifies one or more names of the IPsec proposals for IKEv2.
Each crypto map entry supports up to 11 proposals.
Example:
In this example for IKEv1, when traffic matches ACL 101, the SA can use either myset1 (first priority)
or myset2 (second priority) depending on which transform set matches the transform set of the peer.
d) (Optional) For IKEv2, specify the mode for applying ESP encryption and authentication to the tunnel.
This determines what part of the original IP packet has ESP applied.
crypto map map-name seq-num set ikev2 mode [transport | tunnel | transport-require]
• Tunnel mode—(default) Encapsulation mode will be tunnel mode. Tunnel mode applies ESP
encryption and authentication to the entire original IP packet (IP header and data), thus hiding the
ultimate source and destination addresses.The entire original IP datagram is encrypted, and it becomes
the payload in a new IP packet.
This mode allows a network device, such as a router, to act as an IPsec proxy. That is, the router
performs encryption on behalf of the hosts. The source router encrypts packets and forwards them
along the IPsec tunnel. The destination router decrypts the original IP datagram and forwards it on
to the destination system.
The major advantage of tunnel mode is that the end systems do not need to be modified to receive
the benefits of IPsec. Tunnel mode also protects against traffic analysis; with tunnel mode, an attacker
can only determine the tunnel endpoints and not the true source and destination of the tunneled
packets, even if they are the same as the tunnel endpoints.
• Transport mode— Encapsulation mode will be transport mode with option to fallback on tunnel
mode, if peer does not support it. In Transport mode only the IP payload is encrypted, and the original
IP headers are left intact.
This mode has the advantages of adding only a few bytes to each packet and allowing devices on
the public network to see the final source and destination of the packet. With transport mode, you
can enable special processing (for example, QoS) on the intermediate network based on the information
in the IP header. However, the Layer 4 header is encrypted, which limits examination of the packet.
• Transport Required— Encapsulation mode will be transport mode only, falling back to tunnel
mode is not allowed.
Where tunnel encapsulation mode is the default. transport encapsulation mode is transport mode with
the option to fallback to tunnel mode if the peer does not support it, and transport-require encapsulation
mode enforces transport mode only.
Note Transport mode is not recommended for Remote Access VPNs.
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Create Static Crypto Maps
• If the initiator proposes tunnel mode and responder has transport-require mode, then NO PROPOSAL
CHOSEN will be sent by the responder.
• Similarly if initiator has transport-require, and responder has tunnel mode, NO PROPOSAL CHOSEN
will be sent by the responder.
e) (Optional) Specify an SA lifetime for the crypto map if you want to override the global lifetime.
crypto map map-name seq-num set security-association lifetime {seconds number | kilobytes {number
| unlimited}}
Map-name specifies the name of the crypto map set. Seq-num specifies the number you assign to the
crypto map entry. You can set both lifetimes based on time or on data transmitted. However, the data
transmitted lifetime applies to site-to-site VPN only, it does not apply to remote access VPN.
Example:
This example shortens the timed lifetime for the crypto map mymap 10 to 2700 seconds (45 minutes).
The traffic volume lifetime is not changed.
f) (Optional) Specify that IPsec require perfect forward secrecy when requesting new SA for this crypto
map, or require PFS in requests received from the peer:
crypto map map_name seq-num set pfs [group1 | group2 | group5|group14]
Example:
This example requires PFS when negotiating a new SA for the crypto map mymap 10. The ASA uses the
1024-bit Diffie-Hellman prime modulus group in the new SA.
g) (Optional) Enable Reverse Route Injection (RRI) for any connection based on this crypto map entry.
crypto map map_name seq-num set reverse-route
RRI is done upon configuration and is considered static, remaining in place until the configuration changes
or is removed. The ASA automatically adds static routes to the routing table and announces these routes
to its private network or border routers using OSPF.
Example:
crypto map mymap 10 set reverse-route
Step 6 Apply a crypto map set to an interface for evaluating IPsec traffic:
crypto map map-name interface interface-name
Map-name specifies the name of the crypto map set. Interface-name specifies the name of the interface on
which to enable or disable ISAKMP IKEv1 negotiation.
Example:
In this example, the ASA evaluates the traffic going through the outside interface against the crypto map
mymap to determine whether it needs to be protected.
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Create Dynamic Crypto Maps
As an administrator configuring static crypto maps, you might not know the IP addresses that are dynamically
assigned (via DHCP or some other method), and you might not know the private IP addresses of other clients,
regardless of how they were assigned. VPN clients typically do not have static IP addresses; they require a
dynamic crypto map to allow IPsec negotiation to occur. For example, the headend assigns the IP address to
a Cisco VPN client during IKE negotiation, which the client then uses to negotiate IPsec SAs.
Dynamic crypto maps can ease IPsec configuration, and we recommend them for use in networks where the
peers are not always predetermined. Use dynamic crypto maps for Cisco VPN clients (such as mobile users)
and routers that obtain dynamically assigned IP addresses.
Tip Use care when using the any keyword in permit entries in dynamic crypto maps. If the traffic covered by
such a permit entry could include multicast or broadcast traffic, insert deny entries for the appropriate address
range into the ACL. Remember to insert deny entries for network and subnet broadcast traffic, and for any
other traffic that IPsec should not protect.
Dynamic crypto maps work only to negotiate SAs with remote peers that initiate the connection. The ASA
cannot use dynamic crypto maps to initiate connections to a remote peer. With a dynamic crypto map, if
outbound traffic matches a permit entry in an ACL and the corresponding SA does not yet exist, the ASA
drops the traffic.
A crypto map set may include a dynamic crypto map. Dynamic crypto map sets should be the lowest priority
crypto maps in the crypto map set (that is, they should have the highest sequence numbers) so that the ASA
evaluates other crypto maps first. It examines the dynamic crypto map set only when the other (static) map
entries do not match.
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Create Dynamic Crypto Maps
Similar to static crypto map sets, a dynamic crypto map set consists of all of the dynamic crypto maps with
the same dynamic-map-name. The dynamic-seq-num differentiates the dynamic crypto maps in a set. If you
configure a dynamic crypto map, insert a permit ACL to identify the data flow of the IPsec peer for the crypto
ACL. Otherwise the ASA accepts any data flow identity the peer proposes.
Caution Do not assign module default routes for traffic to be tunneled to a ASA interface configured with a dynamic
crypto map set. To identify the traffic that should be tunneled, add the ACLs to the dynamic crypto map. Use
care to identify the proper address pools when configuring the ACLs associated with remote access tunnels.
Use Reverse Route Injection to install routes only after the tunnel is up.
Create a crypto dynamic map entry using either single or multiple context mode. You can combine static and
dynamic map entries within a single crypto map set.
Procedure
Step 2 Specify which IKEv1 transform sets or IKEv2 proposals are allowed for this dynamic crypto map. List multiple
transform sets or proposals in order of priority (highest priority first) using the command for IKEv1 transform
sets or IKEv2 proposals:
crypto dynamic-map dynamic-map-name dynamic-seq-num set ikev1 transform-set transform-set-name1,
[transform-set-name2, …transform-set-name9]
Step 3 (Optional) Specify the SA lifetime for the crypto dynamic map entry if you want to override the global lifetime
value:
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Provide Site-to-Site Redundancy
Step 4 (Optional) Specify that IPsec ask for PFS when requesting new SAs for this dynamic crypto map, or should
demand PFS in requests received from the peer:
crypto dynamic-map dynamic-map-name dynamic-seq-num set pfs [ group1 | group2 | group5 | group7]
Dynamic-map-name specifies the name of the crypto map entry that refers to a pre-existing dynamic crypto
map. Dynamic-seq-num specifies the sequence number that corresponds to the dynamic crypto map entry.
Example:
Step 5 Add the dynamic crypto map set into a static crypto map set.
Be sure to set the crypto maps referencing dynamic maps to be the lowest priority entries (highest sequence
numbers) in a crypto map set.
crypto map map-name seq-num ipsec-isakmp dynamic dynamic-map-name
Map-name specifies the name of the crypto map set. Dynamic-map-name specifies the name of the crypto
map entry that refers to a pre-existing dynamic crypto map.
Example:
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Managing IPsec VPNs
show running-config crypto map Displays the complete crypto map configuration.
show running-config crypto dynamic-map Displays the dynamic crypto map configuration.
show all crypto map Displays all of the configuration parameters, including
those with default values.
show crypto ikev2 sa detail Shows the Suite B algorithm support in the Encryption
statistics.
show crypto ipsec sa Shows the Suite B algorithm support and the ESPv3
IPsec output in either single or multiple context mode.
show ipsec stats Shows information about the IPsec subsystem in either
single or multiple context mode. ESPv3 statistics are
shown in TFC packets and valid and invalid ICMP
errors received.
Procedure
To enable waiting for all active sessions to voluntarily terminate before the ASA reboots, perform the following
site-to-site task in either single or multiple context mode:
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Alert Peers Before Disconnecting
To enable disconnect notification to IPsec peers, enter the crypto isakmp disconnect-notify command in
either single or multiple context mode.
clear configure crypto dynamic-map Removes all dynamic crypto maps. Includes keywords
that let you remove specific dynamic crypto maps.
clear configure crypto map Removes all crypto maps. Includes keywords that let
you remove specific crypto maps.
clear configure crypto isakmp policy Removes all ISAKMP policies or a specific policy.
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Clear Crypto Map Configurations
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CHAPTER 2
L2TP over IPsec
This chapter describes how to configure L2TP over IPsec/IKEv1 on the ASA.
• About L2TP over IPsec/IKEv1 VPN, on page 41
• Licensing Requirements for L2TP over IPsec, on page 43
• Prerequisites for Configuring L2TP over IPsec, on page 43
• Guidelines and Limitations, on page 43
• Configuring L2TP over IPsec with CLI, on page 45
• Feature History for L2TP over IPsec, on page 50
Note L2TP over IPsec supports only IKEv1. IKEv2 is not supported.
The configuration of L2TP with IPsec/IKEv1 supports certificates using the preshared keys or RSA signature
methods, and the use of dynamic (as opposed to static) crypto maps. This summary of tasks assumes completion
of IKEv1, as well as pre-shared keys or RSA signature configuration. See Chapter 41, “Digital Certificates,”
in the general operations configuration guide for the steps to configure preshared keys, RSA, and dynamic
crypto maps.
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IPsec Transport and Tunnel Modes
Note L2TP with IPsec on the ASA allows the LNS to interoperate with native VPN clients integrated in such
operating systems as Windows, MAC OS X, Android, and Cisco IOS. Only L2TP with IPsec is supported,
native L2TP itself is not supported on ASA. The minimum IPsec security association lifetime supported by
the Windows client is 300 seconds. If the lifetime on the ASA is set to less than 300 seconds, the Windows
client ignores it and replaces it with a 300 second lifetime.
In order for Windows L2TP and IPsec clients to connect to the ASA, you must configure IPsec transport mode
for a transform set using the crypto ipsec transform-set trans_name mode transport command. This
command is used in the configuration procedure.
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Licensing Requirements for L2TP over IPsec
With this transport capability, you can enable special processing (for example, QoS) on the intermediate
network based on the information in the IP header. However, the Layer 4 header is encrypted, which limits
the examination of the packet. Unfortunately, if the IP header is transmitted in clear text, transport mode
allows an attacker to perform some traffic analysis.
IPsec remote access VPN using IKEv2 requires an AnyConnect Plus or Apex license, available separately.
IPsec remote access VPN using IKEv1 and IPsec site-to-site VPN using IKEv1 or IKEv2 uses the Other VPN
license that comes with the base license. See Cisco ASA Series Feature Licenses for maximum values per
model.
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Guidelines and Limitations
Failover Guidelines
L2TP over IPsec sessions are not supported by stateful failover.
IPv6 Guidelines
There is no native IPv6 tunnel setup support for L2TP over IPsec.
Authentication Guidelines
The ASA only supports the PPP authentications PAP and Microsoft CHAP, Versions 1 and 2, on the local
database. EAP and CHAP are performed by proxy authentication servers. Therefore, if a remote user belongs
to a tunnel group configured with the authentication eap-proxy or authentication chap commands, and the
ASA is configured to use the local database, that user will not be able to connect.
LDAP PAP
NT PAP
Kerberos PAP
SDI SDI
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Configuring L2TP over IPsec with CLI
Procedure
Step 1 Create a transform set with a specific ESP encryption type and authentication type.
crypto ipsec ike_version transform-set transform_name ESP_Encryption_Type ESP_Authentication_Type
Example:
crypto ipsec ikev1 transform-set my-transform-set-ikev1 esp-des esp-sha-hmac
Step 2 Instruct IPsec to use transport mode rather than tunnel mode.
crypto ipsec ike_version transform-set trans_name mode transport
Example:
crypto ipsec ikev1 transform-set my-transform-set-ikev1 mode transport
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Configuring L2TP over IPsec with CLI
Example:
hostname(config)# group-policy DfltGrpPolicy attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# vpn-tunnel-protocol l2tp-ipsec
Step 4 (Optional) Instruct the adaptive security appliance to send DNS server IP addresses to the client for the group
policy.
dns value [none | IP_Primary | IP_Secondary]
Example:
hostname(config)# group-policy DfltGrpPolicy attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# dns value 209.165.201.1 209.165.201.2
Step 5 (Optional) Instruct the adaptive security appliance to send WINS server IP addresses to the client for the group
policy.
wins-server value [none | IP_primary [IP_secondary]]
Example:
hostname(config)# group-policy DfltGrpPolicy attributes
hostname (config-group-policy)# wins-server value 209.165.201.3 209.165.201.4
Step 7 (Optional) Associate the pool of IP addresses with the connection profile (tunnel group).
address-pool pool_name
Example:
hostname(config)# tunnel-group DefaultRAGroup general-attributes
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# address-pool sales_addresses
Step 9 Link the name of a group policy to the connection profile (tunnel group).
default-group-policy name
Example:
hostname(config)# tunnel-group DefaultRAGroup general-attributes
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# default-group-policy DfltGrpPolicy
Step 10 Specify a method to authenticate users attempting L2TP over IPsec connections, for the connection profile
(tunnel group). If you are not using the ASA to perform local authentication, and you want to fallback to local
authentication, add LOCAL to the end of the command.
authentication-server-group server_group [local]
Example:
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Configuring L2TP over IPsec with CLI
Step 11 Specify a method to authenticate users attempting L2TP over IPsec connections, for the connection profile
(tunnel group). If you are not using the ASA to perform local authentication, and you want to fallback to local
authentication, add LOCAL to the end of the command.
authentication auth_type
Example:
hostname(config)# tunnel-group name ppp-attributes
hostname(config-ppp)# authentication ms-chap-v1
Step 12 Set the pre-shared key for your connection profile (tunnel group).
tunnel-group tunnel group name ipsec-attributes
Example:
hostname(config)# tunnel-group DefaultRAGroup ipsec-attributes
hostname(config-tunnel-ipsec)# ikev1 pre-shared-key cisco123
Step 13 (Optional) Generate a AAA accounting start and stop record for an L2TP session for the connection profile
(tunnel group).
accounting-server-group aaa_server_group
Example:
hostname(config)# tunnel-group sales_tunnel general-attributes
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# accounting-server-group sales_aaa_server
Step 14 Configure the interval (in seconds) between hello messages. The range is 10 through 300 seconds. The default
interval is 60 seconds.
l2tp tunnel hello seconds
Example:
hostname(config)# l2tp tunnel hello 100
Step 15 (Optional) Enable NAT traversal so that ESP packets can pass through one or more NAT devices.
If you expect multiple L2TP clients behind a NAT device to attempt L2TP over IPsec connections to the
adaptive security appliance, you must enable NAT traversal.
crypto isakmp nat-traversal seconds
To enable NAT traversal globally, check that ISAKMP is enabled (you can enable it with the crypto isakmp
enable command) in global configuration mode, and then use the crypto isakmp nat-traversal command.
Example:
hostname(config)# crypto ikev1 enable
hostname(config)# crypto isakmp nat-traversal 1500
Step 16 (Optional) Configure tunnel group switching. The goal of tunnel group switching is to give users a better
chance at establishing a VPN connection when they authenticate using a proxy authentication server. Tunnel
group is synonymous with connection profile.
strip-group
strip-realm
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Creating IKE Policies to Respond to Windows 7 Proposals
Example:
hostname(config)# tunnel-group DefaultRAGroup general-attributes
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# strip-group
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# strip-realm
Step 17 (Optional) Create a user with the username jdoe, the password j!doe1. The mschap option specifies that
the password is converted to Unicode and hashed using MD4 after you enter it.
This step is needed only if you are using a local user database.
username name password password mschap
Example:
asa2(config)# username jdoe password j!doe1 mschap
Step 18 Create the IKE Policy for Phase 1 and assign it a number.
crypto ikev1 policy priority
group Diffie-Hellman Group
There are several different parameters of the IKE policy that you can configure. You can also specify a
Diffie-Hellman Group for the policy. The isakamp policy is used by the ASA to complete the IKE negotiation.
Example:
hostname(config)# crypto ikev1 policy 5
hostname(config-ikev1-policy)#
Procedure
Step 1 Display the attributes and the number of any existing IKE policies.
Example:
hostname(config)# show run crypto ikev1
Step 2 Configure an IKE policy. The number argument specifies the number of the IKE policy you are configuring.
This number was listed in the output of the show run crypto ikev1 command.
crypto ikev1 policy number
Step 3 Set the authentication method the ASA uses to establish the identity of each IPsec peer to use preshared keys.
Example:
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Configuration Example for L2TP over IPsec
Step 4 Choose a symmetric encryption method that protects data transmitted between two IPsec peers. For Windows
7, choose 3des or aes for 128-bit AES, or aes-256.
encryption {3des|aes|aes-256}
Step 5 Choose the hash algorithm that ensures data integrity. For Windows 7, specify sha for the SHA-1 algorithm.
Example:
hostname(config-ikev1-policy)# hash sha
Step 6 Choose the Diffie-Hellman group identifier. You can specify 5 for aes, aes-256, or 3des encryption types.
You can specify 2 only for 3des encryption types .
Example:
hostname(config-ikev1-policy)# group 5
Step 7 Specify the SA lifetime in seconds. For Windows 7, specify 86400 seconds to represent 24 hours.
Example:
hostname(config-ikev1-policy)# lifetime 86400
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Feature History for L2TP over IPsec
hash sha
group 2
lifetime 86400
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CHAPTER 3
General VPN Parameters
The ASA implementation of virtual private networking includes useful features that do not fit neatly into
categories. This chapter describes some of these features.
• Guidelines and Limitations, on page 51
• Configure IPsec to Bypass ACLs, on page 52
• Permitting Intra-Interface Traffic (Hairpinning), on page 52
• Setting Maximum Active IPsec or SSL VPN Sessions, on page 54
• Use Client Update to Ensure Acceptable IPsec Client Revision Levels, on page 54
• Implement NAT-Assigned IP to Public IP Connection, on page 56
• Configure VPN Session Limits, on page 58
• Using an Identify Certificate When Negotiating, on page 59
• Configure the Pool of Cryptographic Cores, on page 60
• Configure Dynamic Split Tunneling, on page 61
• Viewing Active VPN Sessions, on page 62
• About ISE Policy Enforcement, on page 64
• Configure Advanced SSL Settings, on page 68
• Persistent IPsec Tunneled Flows, on page 73
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Configure IPsec to Bypass ACLs
Note Decrypted through-traffic is permitted from the client despite having an access group on the outside interface,
which calls a deny ip any any ACL, while no sysopt connection permit-vpn is configured.
Trying to control access to the protected network via site-to-site or remote access VPN using the no sysopt
permit-vpn command in conjunction with an access control list (ACL) on the outside interface are not
successful.
sysopt connection permit-vpn will bypass ACLs (both in and out) on interface where crypto map for that
interesting traffic is enabled, along with egress (out) ACLs of all other interfaces, but not the ingress (in)
ACLs.
In this situation, when management-access inside is enabled, the ACL is not applied, and users can still connect
to the ASA using SSH. Traffic to hosts on the inside network is blocked correctly by the ACL, but decrypted
through-traffic to the inside interface is not blocked.
The ssh and http commands are of a higher priority than the ACLs. To deny SSH, Telnet, or ICMP traffic to
the box from the VPN session, use ssh, telnet and icmp commands.
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NAT Considerations for Intra-Interface Traffic
To configure this feature, use the same-security-traffic command in global configuration mode with its
intra-interface argument.
The command syntax is same-security-traffic permit {inter-interface | intra-interface}.
The following example shows how to enable intra-interface traffic:
Note Use the same-security-traffic command with the inter-interface argument to permit communication between
interfaces with the same security level. This feature is not specific to IPsec connections. For more information,
see the “Configuring Interface Parameters” chapter of this guide.
To use hairpinning, you must apply the proper NAT rules to the ASA interface, as described in NAT
Considerations for Intra-Interface Traffic.
When the ASA sends encrypted VPN traffic back out this same interface, however, NAT is optional. The
VPN-to-VPN hairpinning works with or without NAT. To apply NAT to all outgoing traffic, implement only
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Setting Maximum Active IPsec or SSL VPN Sessions
the commands above. To exempt the VPN-to-VPN traffic from NAT, add commands (to the example above)
that implement NAT exemption for VPN-to-VPN traffic, such as:
For more information on NAT rules, see the “Applying NAT” chapter of this guide.
Note The correct licensing, term, tier, and user count is no longer determined with these commands. Refer to the
AnyConnect Ordering Guide: http://www.cisco.com/c/dam/en/us/products/collateral/security/anyconnect-og.pdf
The max-other-vpn-limit keyword specifies the maximum number of VPN sessions other than AnyConnect
client sessions, from 1 to the maximum sessions allowed by the license. This includes the Cisco VPN client
(IPsec IKEv1) and Lan-to-Lan VPN sessions.
This limit affects the calculated load percentage for VPN Load Balancing.
The following example shows how to set a maximum Anyconnect VPN session limit of 450:
The client update feature lets administrators at a central location automatically notify VPN client users that
it is time to update the VPN client software.
Remote users might be using outdated VPN software or hardware client versions. You can use the client-update
command at any time to enable updating client revisions; specify the types and revision numbers of clients
to which the update applies; provide a URL or IP address from which to get the update; and, in the case of
Windows clients, optionally notify users that they should update their VPN client version. For Windows
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Use Client Update to Ensure Acceptable IPsec Client Revision Levels
clients, you can provide a mechanism for users to accomplish that update. This command applies only to the
IPsec remote-access tunnel-group type.
To perform a client update, enter the client-update command in either general configuration mode or
tunnel-group ipsec-attributes configuration mode. If the client is already running a software version on the
list of revision numbers, it does not need to update its software. If the client is not running a software version
on the list, it should update. The following procedure explains how to perform a client update:
Procedure
Step 1 In global configuration mode, enable client update by entering this command:
Step 2 In global configuration mode, specify the parameters for the client update that you want to apply to all clients
of a particular type. That is, specify the type of client, the URL or IP address from which to get the updated
image, and the acceptable revision number or numbers for that client. You can specify up to four revision
numbers, separated by commas.
If the user’s client revision number matches one of the specified revision numbers, there is no need to update
the client. This command specifies the client update values for all clients of the specified type across the entire
ASA.
Use this syntax:
The available client types are win9X (includes Windows 95, Windows 98 and Windows ME platforms),
winnt (includes Windows NT 4.0, Windows 2000 and Windows XP platforms), windows (includes all
Windows based platforms).
If the client is already running a software version on the list of revision numbers, it does not need to update
its software. If the client is not running a software version on the list, it should update. You can specify up to
three of these client update entries. The keyword windows covers all of the allowable Windows platforms.
If you specify windows, do not specify the individual Windows client types.
Note For all Windows clients, you must use the protocol http:// or https:// as the prefix for the URL.
The following example configures client update parameters for the remote access tunnel group. It
designates the revision number 4.6.1 and the URL for retrieving the update, which is
https://support/updates.
Alternatively, you can configure client update just for individual tunnel groups, rather than for all clients of
a particular type. (See Step 3.)
Note You can have the browser automatically start an application by including the application name at
the end of the URL; for example: https://support/updates/vpnclient.exe.
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Implement NAT-Assigned IP to Public IP Connection
Step 3 Define a set of client-update parameters for a particular ipsec-ra tunnel group.
In tunnel-group ipsec-attributes mode, specify the tunnel group name and its type, the URL or IP address from
which to get the updated image, and a revision number. If the user’s client’s revision number matches one of
the specified revision numbers, there is no need to update the client, for example, for a Windows client enter
this command:
Step 4 (Optional) Send a notice to active users with outdated Windows clients that their client needs updating. For
these users, a pop-up window appears, offering them the opportunity to launch a browser and download the
updated software from the site that you specified in the URL. The only part of this message that you can
configure is the URL. (See Step 2 or 3.) Users who are not active get a notification message the next time
they log on. You can send this notice to all active clients on all tunnel groups, or you can send it to clients on
a particular tunnel group. For example, to notify all active clients on all tunnel groups, enter the following
command in privileged EXEC mode:
If the user’s client’s revision number matches one of the specified revision numbers, there is no need to update
the client, and no notification message is sent to the user.
What to do next
Note If you specify the client-update type as windows (specifying all Windows-based platforms) and later want to
enter a client-update type of win9x or winnt for the same entity, you must first remove the windows client
type with the no form of the command, then use new client-update commands to specify the new client types.
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Displaying VPN NAT Policies
Because of routing issues, we do not recommend using this feature unless you know you need it.
• Only supports legacy (IKEv1) and AnyConnect clients.
• Return traffic to the public IP addresses must be routed back to the ASA so the NAT policy and VPN
policy can be applied.
• Only supports IPv4 assigned and public addresses.
• Multiple peers behind a NAT/PAT device are not supported.
• Does not support load balancing (because of routing issue).
• Does not support roaming.
Procedure
This command dynamically installs NAT policies of the assigned IP address to the public IP address of the
source. The interface determines where to apply NAT.
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# no nat-assigned-to-public-ip
Outside is the interface to which the AnyConnect client connects and inside is the interface specific to the
new tunnel group.
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Configure VPN Session Limits
Note Since VPN NAT policies are dynamic and not added to the configuration, the VPN NAT object and NAT
policy are hidden from the show run object and show run nat reports.
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Show License Resource Usage
Note You can also use the sh resource usage system controller all 0 command to show system level usage with
the limit as the platform limit.
ASA(config-ca-trustpoint)# sh resource usage
Resource Current Peak Limit Denied Context
Conns 1 16 280000 0 System
Hosts 2 10 N/A 0 System
AnyConnect 2 25 1000 0 cust1
AnyConnectBurst 0 0 200 0 cust1
OtherVPN 1 1 2000 0 cust2
OtherVPNBurst 0 0 1000 0 cust2
Using this command allows the AnyConnect client to support group selection for the end user. You can
configure two trustpoints at the same time: two RSA, two ECDSA, or one of each. The ASA scans the
configured trustpoint list and chooses the first one that the client supports. If ECDSA is preferred, you should
configure that trustpoint before the RSA trustpoint.
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Configure the Pool of Cryptographic Cores
The line number option specifies where in the line number you want the trustpoint inserted. Typically, this
option is used to insert a trustpoint at the top without removing and re-adding the other line. If a line is not
specified, the ASA adds the trustpoint at the end of the list.
If you try to add a trustpoint that already exists, you receive an error. If you use the no crypto ikev2
remote-access trustpoint command without specifying which trustpoint name to remove, all trustpoint
configuration is removed.
Procedure
Example:
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Configure Dynamic Split Tunneling
Procedure
What to do next
If split include tunneling is configured, a dynamic split exclusion is enforced only if at least one of the DNS
response IP addresses is part of the split-include network. If there is no overlap between any of the DNS
response IP addresses and any of the split-include networks, enforcing dynamic split exclusion is not necessary
since traffic matching all DNS response IP addresses is already excluded from tunneling.
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Viewing Active VPN Sessions
Example Output from show vpn-sessiondb anyconnect filter p-ipversion [v4 | v6] command
Output from show vpn-sessiondb anyconnect filter a-ipversion [v4 | v6] command
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Viewing Active Clientless SSL VPN Sessions by IP Address Type
Examples
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About ISE Policy Enforcement
Note Some policy elements such as Dynamic ACL (dACL) and Security Group Tag (SGT) are supported, whereas
policy elements such as VLAN assignment and IP address assignment are not supported.
Note Additional policy evaluations may occur during the lifetime of the connection, transparent to the ASA, via
subsequent CoA updates.
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Configure RADIUS Server Groups for ISE Policy Enforcement
Procedure
Step 2 Enable the RADIUS dynamic authorization (CoA) services for the AAA server group.
dynamic-authorization [port number]
Specifying a port is optional. The default is 1700, the range is 1024 to 65535.
When you use the server group in a VPN tunnel, the RADIUS server group will be registered for CoA
notification and the ASA will listen to the port for the CoA policy updates from ISE
hostname(config-aaa-server-group)# dynamic-authorization
Step 3 If you do not want to use ISE for authentication, enable authorize-only mode for the RADIUS server group.
authorize-only
This indicates that when this server group is used for authorization, the RADIUS Access Request message
will be built as an “Authorize Only” request as opposed to the configured password methods defined for the
AAA server. If you do configure a common password using radius-common-pw command for the RADIUS
server, it will be ignored.
For example, you would use authorize-only mode if you want to use certificates for authentication rather than
this server group. You would still use this server group for authorization and accounting in the VPN tunnel.
hostname(config-aaa-server-group)# authorize-only
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Configure RADIUS Server Groups for ISE Policy Enforcement
Step 5 (Optional.) Merge a downloadable ACL with the ACL received in the Cisco AV pair from a RADIUS packet.
merge-dacl {before-avpair | after-avpair}
This option applies only to VPN connections. For VPN users, ACLs can be in the form of Cisco AV pair
ACLs, downloadable ACLs, and an ACL that is configured on the ASA. This option determines whether or
not the downloadable ACL and the AV pair ACL are merged, and does not apply to any ACLs configured on
the ASA.
The default setting is no merge dacl, which specifies that downloadable ACLs will not be merged with Cisco
AV pair ACLs. If both an AV pair and a downloadable ACL are received, the AV pair has priority and is
used.
The before-avpair option specifies that the downloadable ACL entries should be placed before the Cisco AV
pair entries.
The after-avpair option specifies that the downloadable ACL entries should be placed after the Cisco AV
pair entries.
Step 6 (Optional.) Specify the maximum number of requests sent to a RADIUS server in the group before trying the
next server.
max-failed-attempts number
The range is from 1 and 5. The default is 3.
If you configured a fallback method using the local database (for management access only), and all the servers
in the group fail to respond, then the group is considered to be unresponsive, and the fallback method is tried.
The server group remains marked as unresponsive for a period of 10 minutes (by default), so that additional
AAA requests within that period do not attempt to contact the server group, and the fallback method is used
immediately. To change the unresponsive period from the default, see the reactivation-mode command in
the next step.
If you do not have a fallback method, the ASA continues to retry the servers in the group.
hostname(config-aaa-server-group)# max-failed-attempts 2
Step 7 (Optional.) Specify the method (reactivation policy) by which failed servers in a group are reactivated.
reactivation-mode {depletion [deadtime minutes] | timed}
Where:
• depletion [deadtime minutes] reactivates failed servers only after all of the servers in the group are
inactive. This is the default reactivation mode. You can specify the amount of time, between 0 and 1440
minutes, that elapses between the disabling of the last server in the group and the subsequent reenabling
of all servers. The default is 10 minutes.
• timed reactivates failed servers after 30 seconds of down time.
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Example Configurations for ISE Policy Enforcement
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Troubleshooting Policy Enforcement
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Configure Advanced SSL Settings
Note For Release 9.4(1), all SSLv3 keywords have been removed from the ASA configuration, and SSLv3 support
has been removed from the ASA. If you have SSLv3 enabled, a boot-time error will appear from the command
with the SSLv3 option. The ASA will then revert to the default use of TLSv1.
The Citrix mobile receiver may not support TLS 1.1/1.2 protocols; see
https://www.citrix.com/content/dam/citrix/en_us/documents/products-solutions/citrix-receiver-feature-matrix.pdf
for compatibility
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Configure Advanced SSL Settings
To specify the minimum protocol version for which the ASA will negotiate SSL/TLS connections, perform
the following steps:
Procedure
Step 1 Set the minimum protocol version for which the ASA will negotiate a connection.
ssl server-version [tlsv1 | tlsv1.1 | tlsv1.2 ]
Where:
• tlsv1—Enter this keyword to accept SSLv2 ClientHellos and negotiate TLSv1 (or greater)
• tlsv1.1—Enter this keyword to accept SSLv2 ClientHellos and negotiate TLSv1.1 (or greater)
• tlsv1.2 —Enter this keyword to accept SSLv2 ClientHellos and negotiate TLSv1.2 (or greater)
Example:
Examples:
hostname(config)# ssl server-version tlsv1.1
Step 2 Specify the SSL/TLS protocol version that the ASA uses when acting as a client.
The tlsv1 keyword specifies that the ASA transmit TLSv1 client hellos and negotiate TLSv1 (or greater). The
tlsv1.1 keyword specifies that the ASA transmit TLSv1.1 client hellos and negotiate TLSv1.1 (or greater).
The tlsv1.2 keyword specifies that the ASA transmit TLSv1.2 client hellos and negotiate TLSv1.2 (or greater).
(DTLS not available for SSL client role).
Step 3 Specify the encryption algorithms for the SSL, DTLS, and TLS protocols.
ssl cipher version [ level | custom string
Where:
• The version argument specifies the SSL, DTLS, or TLS protocol version. Supported versions include:
• default—The set of ciphers for outbound connections.
• dtlsv1—The ciphers for DTLSv1 inbound connections.
• dtlsv1.2—The ciphers for DTLSv1.2 inbound connections.
• tlsv1—The ciphers for TLSv1 inbound connections.
• tlsv1.1—The ciphers for TLSv1.1 inbound connections.
• tlsv1.2—The ciphers for TLSv1.2 inbound connections.
• The level argument specifies the strength of the ciphers and indicates the minimum level of ciphers that
are configured. Valid values in increasing order of strength are:
• all—Includes all ciphers, including NULL-SHA.
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Configure Advanced SSL Settings
• Specifying the custom string option allows you to have full control of the cipher suite using OpenSSL
cipher definition strings. For more information, see https://www.openssl.org/docs/apps/ciphers.html.
The recommended setting is medium. Using high may limit connectivity. Using custom may limit functionality
if there are only a few ciphers configured. Restricting the default custom value limits outbound connectivity,
including clustering.
The ASA specifies the order of priority for supported ciphers. See the command reference for more information.
This command replaces the ssl encryption command, which has been deprecated starting with Version 9.3(2).
The name argument specifies the name of the trustpoint. The interface argument specifies the name of the
interface on which a trustpoint is configured. The vpnlb-ip keyword applies only to interfaces and associates
this trustpoint with the VPN load-balancing cluster IP address on this interface. The domaindomain-name
keyword-argument pair specifies a trustpoint that is associated with a particular domain name that is used to
access the interface.
You may configure a maximum of 16 trustpoints per interface.
If you do not specify an interface or domain, this command creates the fallback trustpoint for all interfaces
that do not have a trustpoint configured.
If you enter the ssl trustpoint ? command, the available configured trustpoints appear. If you enter the ssl
trust-point name ? command (for example, ssl trust-point mysslcert ?), the available configured interfaces
for the trustpoint-SSL certificate association appear.
Observe these guidelines when using this command:
• The value for trustpoint must be the name of the CA trustpoint as configured in the crypto ca trustpoint
name command.
• The value for interface must be the nameif name of a previously configured interface.
• Removing a trustpoint also removes any ssl trust-point entries that reference that trustpoint.
• You can have one ssl trust-point entry for each interface and one that specifies no interfaces.
• You can reuse the same trustpoint for multiple entries.
• A trustpoint configured with the domain keyword may apply to multiple interfaces (depending on how
you connect).
• You may only have one ssl trust-point per domain-name value.
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It means that a user has configured a new certificate to replace a previously configured certificate. No
action is required.
• The certificates are chosen in the following order:
• If a connection matches the value of the domain keyword, that certificate is chosen first. (ssl
trust-pointnamedomaindomain-name command)
• If a connection is made to the load-balancing address, the vpnlb-ip certificate is chosen. (ssl
trust-point name interface vpnlb-ip command)
• The certificate configured for the interface. (ssl trust-point name interface command)
• The default certificate not associated with an interface. (ssl trust-point name)
• The ASA's self-signed, self-generated certificate.
Step 5 Specify the DH group to be used with DHE-RSA ciphers that are used by TLS.
Groups 1 and 2 are compatible with Java 7 and earlier versions. Groups 5, 14, and 24 are not compatible with
Java 7. All groups are compatible with Java 8. Groups 14 and 24 are FIPS-compliant. The default value is ssl
dh-group group2.
Step 6 Specify the group to be used with ECDHE-ECDSA ciphers that are used by TLS.
The group19 keyword configures group 19 (256-bit EC). The group20 keyword configures group 20 (384-bit
EC). The group21 keyword configures group 21 (521-bit EC).
The default value is ssl ecdh-group group19.
Note ECDSA and DHE ciphers are the highest priority.
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Example
Note This feature supports IPsec LAN-to-LAN tunnels and IPsec Remote-Access tunnels running in
Network-Extension Mode. It does not support IPsec or AnyConnect/SSL VPN remote access tunnels.
The following example shows how the persistent IPsec tunneled flows feature works.
Figure 4: Network Scenario
In this example the BXB and RTP networks are connected through a secure LAN-to-LAN tunnel by a pair
of security appliances. A PC in the BXB network is executing an FTP transfer from a server in the RTP
network through the secure tunnel. In this scenario, assume that for some reason the tunnel drops after the PC
has logged into the server and started the transfer. Although the tunnel is be reestablished since the data is
still attempting to flow, the FTP transfer will not complete. The user must terminate the transfer and start over
by logging back into the server. However, if persistent IPsec tunnel flows is enabled, as long as the tunnel is
recreated within the timeout interval, the data continues to flow successfully through the new tunnel because
the security appliances retain the history (state information) for this flow.
Scenario
The following sections describe the data flow situations for a dropped and recovered tunnel, first with the
persistent IPsec tunneled flows feature disabled, then with the feature enabled. In both of these cases, see the
preceding figure for an illustration of the network. In this illustration:
• Flow B-C defines the tunnel and carries the encrypted ESP data.
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• Flow A-D is the TCP connection for the FTP transfer and traverses the tunnel defined by flow B-C. This
flow also contains state information used by the firewall to inspect the TCP/FTP flow. The state
information is vital and is constantly updated by the firewall as the transfer progresses.
Note The reverse flows in each direction are omitted for simplicity.
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---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Peer IP = ASA_Private
Pointer = 0x6DE62DA0
State = UP
Flags = DECR+ESP+PRESERVE
SA = 0x001659BF
SPI = 0xB326496C
Group = 0
Pkts = 0
Bad Pkts = 0
Bad SPI = 0
Spoof = 0
Bad Crypto = 0
Rekey Pkt = 0
Rekey Call = 0
Peer IP = ASA_Private
Pointer = 0x6DE635E0
State = UP
Flags = ENCR+ESP+PRESERVE
SA = 0x0017988D
SPI = 0x9AA50F43
Group = 0
Pkts = 0
Bad Pkts = 0
Bad SPI = 0
Spoof = 0
Bad Crypto = 0
Rekey Pkt = 0
Rekey Call = 0
hostname(config)#
Configuration and Restrictions
This configuration option is subject to the same CLI configuration restrictions as other
sysopt VPN CLI.
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The following example shows sample output from the show conn command when an orphan flow exists, as
indicated by the V flag:
To limit the report to those connections that have orphan flows, add the vpn_orphan option to the show conn
state command, as in the following example:
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CHAPTER 4
Connection Profiles, Group Policies, and Users
This chapter describes how to configure VPN connection profiles (formerly called “tunnel groups”), group
policies, and users. This chapter includes the following sections.
• Overview of Connection Profiles, Group Policies, and Users, on page 77
• Connection Profiles, on page 78
• Configure Connection Profiles, on page 82
• Group Policies, on page 117
• Use of a Zone Labs Integrity Server, on page 155
• Configure User Attributes, on page 162
Note You configure connection profiles using tunnel-group commands. In this chapter, the terms “connection
profile” and “tunnel group” are often used interchangeably.
Connection profiles and group policies simplify system management. To streamline the configuration task,
the ASA provides a default LAN-to-LAN connection profile (DefaultL2Lgroup), a default remote access
connection profile for IKEv2 VPN (DefaultRAgroup), a default connection profile for Clientless SSL and
AnyConnect SSL connections (DefaultWEBVPNgroup), and a default group policy (DfltGrpPolicy). The
default connection profiles and group policy provide settings are likely to be common for many users. As you
add users, you can specify that they “inherit” parameters from a group policy. Thus you can quickly configure
VPN access for large numbers of users.
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Connection Profiles
If you decide to grant identical rights to all VPN users, then you do not need to configure specific connection
profiles or group policies, but VPNs seldom work that way. For example, you might allow a finance group
to access one part of a private network, a customer support group to access another part, and an MIS group
to access other parts. In addition, you might allow specific users within MIS to access systems that other MIS
users cannot access. Connection profiles and group policies provide the flexibility to do so securely.
Note The ASA also includes the concept of object groups, which are a superset of network lists. Object groups let
you define VPN access to ports as well as networks. Object groups relate to ACLs rather than to group policies
and connection profiles. For more information about using object groups, see Chapter 20, "Objects" in the
general operations configuration guide.
The security appliance can apply attribute values from a variety of sources. It applies them according to the
following hierarchy:
1. Dynamic Access Policy (DAP) record
2. Username
3. Group policy
4. Group policy for the connection profile
5. Default group policy
Therefore, DAP values for an attribute have a higher priority than those configured for a user, group policy,
or connection profile.
When you enable or disable an attribute for a DAP record, the ASA applies that value and enforces it. For
example, when you disable HTTP proxy in dap webvpn configuration mode, the ASA looks no further for a
value. When you instead use the no value for the http-proxy command, the attribute is not present in the DAP
record, so the security appliance moves down to the AAA attribute in the username, and if necessary, to the
group policy and finds a value to apply. The ASA clientless SSL VPN configuration supports only one
http-proxy and one https-proxy command each. We recommend that you use ASDM to configure DAP.
Connection Profiles
A connection profile consists of a set of records that determines tunnel connection policies. These records
identify the servers to which the tunnel user is authenticated, as well as the accounting servers, if any, to which
connection information is sent. They also identify a default group policy for the connection, and they contain
protocol-specific connection parameters. Connection profiles include a small number of attributes that pertain
to creating the tunnel itself. Connection profiles include a pointer to a group policy that defines user-oriented
attributes.
The ASA provides the following default connection profiles: DefaultL2Lgroup for LAN-to-LAN connections,
DefaultRAgroup for IPSEC remote access connections, and DefaultWEBVPNGroup for SSL VPN
(browser-based and AnyConnect Client based) connections. You can modify these default connection profiles,
but you cannot delete them. You can also create one or more connection profiles specific to your environment.
Connection profiles are local to the ASA and are not configurable on external servers.
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Note Some profiles (such as IKEv1 in phase 1) may be unable to determine whether an endpoint is remote access
or LAN-to-LAN. If it cannot determine the tunnel group, it defaults to
tunnel-group-map default-group <tunnel-group-name>
(default is DefaultRAGroup).
• Connection type—Connection types include IKEv1 remote-access, IPsec LAN-to-LAN, and AnyConnect
(SSL/IKEv2). A connection profile can have only one connection type.
• Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting servers—These parameters identify the server groups or
lists that the ASA uses for the following purposes:
• Authenticating users
• Obtaining information about services users are authorized to access
• Storing accounting records
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authentication is based on the username alone. Otherwise, authentication is based on the full
username@realm or username<delimiter> group string. You must specify strip-realm if your server is
unable to parse delimiters.
In addition, for L2TP/IPsec clients only, when you specify the strip-group command the ASA selects
the connection profile (tunnel group) for user connections by obtaining the group name from the username
presented by the VPN client.
• Authorization required—This parameter lets you require authorization before a user can connect, or turn
off that requirement.
• Authorization DN attributes—This parameter specifies which Distinguished Name attributes to use when
performing authorization.
• ISAKMP (IKE) keepalive settings. This feature lets the ASA monitor the continued presence of a remote
peer and report its own presence to that peer. If the peer becomes unresponsive, the ASA removes the
connection. Enabling IKE keepalives prevents hung connections when the IKE peer loses connectivity.
There are various forms of IKE keepalives. For this feature to work, both the ASA and its remote peer
must support a common form. This feature works with the following peers:
• Cisco AnyConnect VPN Client
• Cisco IOS software
• Cisco Secure PIX Firewall
Non-Cisco VPN clients do not support IKE keepalives.
If you are configuring a group of mixed peers, and some of those peers support IKE keepalives and
others do not, enable IKE keepalives for the entire group. The feature does not affect the peers that
do not support it.
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If you disable IKE keepalives, connections with unresponsive peers remain active until they time
out, so we recommend that you keep your idle timeout short. To change your idle timeout, see
Configure Group Policies, on page 120.
Note To reduce connectivity costs, disable IKE keepalives if this group includes any
clients connecting via ISDN lines. ISDN connections normally disconnect if idle,
but the IKE keepalive mechanism prevents connections from idling and therefore
from disconnecting.
If you do disable IKE keepalives, the client disconnects only when either its IKE
or IPsec keys expire. Failed traffic does not disconnect the tunnel with the Peer
Timeout Profile values as it does when IKE keepalives are enabled.
If you have a LAN-to-LAN configuration using IKE main mode, make sure that
the two peers have the same IKE keepalive configuration. Both peers must have
IKE keepalives enabled or both peers must have it disabled.
• If you configure authentication using digital certificates, you can specify whether to send the entire
certificate chain (which sends the peer the identity certificate and all issuing certificates) or just the
issuing certificates (including the root certificate and any subordinate CA certificates).
• You can notify users who are using outdated versions of Windows client software that they need to update
their client, and you can provide a mechanism for them to get the updated client version. You can configure
and change the client-update, either for all connection profiles or for particular connection profiles.
• If you configure authentication using digital certificates, you can specify the name of the trustpoint that
identifies the certificate to send to the IKE peer.
Note In earlier releases, “connection profiles” were known as “tunnel groups.” You configure a connection profile
with tunnel-group commands. This chapter often uses these terms interchangeably.
Function
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Function
dns-group Identifies the DNS server group that specifies the DNS
server name, domain name, name server, number of
retries, and timeout values for a DNS server to use
for a connection profile.
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Note Multiple-context mode applies only to IKEv2 and IKEv1 site to site and does not apply to AnyConnect,
Clientless SSL VPN, legacy Cisco VPN client, the Apple native VPN client, the Microsoft native VPN client,
or cTCP for IKEv1 IPsec.
You can modify the default connection profiles, and you can configure a new connection profile as any of
the three tunnel-group types. If you do not explicitly configure an attribute in a connection profile, that attribute
gets its value from the default connection profile. The default connection-profile type is remote access. The
subsequent parameters depend upon your choice of tunnel type. To see the current configured and default
configuration of all your connection profiles, including the default connection profile, enter the show
running-config all tunnel-group command.
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authentication ms-chap-v1
no authentication ms-chap-v2
no authentication eap-proxy
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Specify a Name and Type for the Remote Access Connection Profile
To configure a remote-access connection profile, first configure the tunnel-group general attributes, then the
remote-access attributes. See the following sections:
• Specify a Name and Type for the Remote Access Connection Profile, on page 85.
• Configure Remote-Access Connection Profile General Attributes, on page 85.
• Configure Double Authentication, on page 89
• Configure Remote-Access Connection Profile IPsec IKEv1 Attributes, on page 91.
• Configure IPsec Remote-Access Connection Profile PPP Attributes, on page 93
Specify a Name and Type for the Remote Access Connection Profile
Procedure
Create the connection profile, specifying its name and type, by entering the tunnel-group command.
For a remote-access tunnel, the type is remote-access.
tunnel-group tunnel_group_name type remote-access
Example:
For example, to create a remote-access connection profile named TunnelGroup1, enter the following command:
Procedure
Step 1 To configure the general attributes, enter the tunnel-group general-attributes task in either single or multiple
context mode, which enters tunnel-group general-attributes configuration mode. The prompt changes to
indicate the change in mode.
Step 2 Specify the name of the authentication-server group, if any, to use. If you want to use the LOCAL database
for authentication if the specified server group fails, append the keyword LOCAL:
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Step 3 Specify the name of the authorization-server group, if any, to use. When you configure this value, users must
exist in the authorization database to connect:
The name of the authorization server group can be up to 16 characters long. For example, the following
command specifies the use of the authorization-server group FinGroup:
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# authorization-server-groupFinGroup
hostname(config-tunnel-general)#
The name of the accounting server group can be up to 16 characters long. For example, the following command
specifies the use of the accounting-server group named comptroller:
The name of the group policy can be up to 64 characters long. The following example sets DfltGrpPolicy as
the name of the default group policy:
Step 6 Specify the names or IP addresses of the DHCP server (up to 10 servers), and the names of the DHCP address
pools (up to 6 pools). The defaults are no DHCP server and no address pool. The dhcp-server command will
allow you to configure the ASA to send additional options to the specified DHCP servers when it is trying to
get IP addresses for VPN clients. See the dhcp-server command in the Cisco ASA Series Command Reference
guide for more information.
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Note If you specify an interface name, you must enclosed it within parentheses.
You configure address pools with the ip local pool command in global configuration mode.
Step 7 Specify the name of the NAC authentication server group, if you are using Network Admission Control, to
identify the group of authentication servers to be used for Network Admission Control posture validation.
Configure at least one Access Control Server to support NAC. Use the aaa-server command to name the
ACS group. Then use the nac-authentication-server-group command, using the same name for the server
group.
The following example identifies acs-group1 as the authentication server group to be used for NAC posture
validation:
The following example inherits the authentication server group from the default remote access group:
hostname(config-group-policy)# no nac-authentication-server-group
hostname(config-group-policy)
Step 8 Specify whether to strip the group or the realm from the username before passing it on to the AAA server.
The default is not to strip either the group name or the realm:
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# strip-group
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# strip-realm
hostname(config-tunnel-general)#
A realm is an administrative domain. If you strip the realm, the ASA uses the username and the group (if
present) authentication. If you strip the group, the ASA uses the username and the realm (if present) for
authentication. Enter the strip-realm command to remove the realm qualifier, and use the strip-group command
to remove the group qualilfier from the username during authentication. If you remove both qualifiers,
authentication is based on the username alone. Otherwise, authentication is based on the full username@realm
or username<delimiter> group string. You must specify strip-realm if your server is unable to parse delimiters.
Step 9 Optionally, if your server is a RADIUS, RADIUS with NT, or LDAP server, you can enable password
management.
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Note If you are using an LDAP directory server for authentication, password management is supported
with the Sun Microsystems JAVA System Directory Server (formerly named the Sun ONE Directory
Server) and the Microsoft Active Directory.
Sun—The DN configured on the ASA to access a Sun directory server must be able to access the
default password policy on that server. We recommend using the directory administrator, or a user
with directory administrator privileges, as the DN. Alternatively, you can place an ACI on the default
password policy.
Microsoft—You must configure LDAP over SSL to enable password management with Microsoft
Active Directory.
This feature, which is disabled by default, warns a user when the current password is about to expire.
The default is to begin warning the user 14 days before expiration:
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# password-management
hostname(config-tunnel-general)#
If the server is an LDAP server, you can specify the number of days (0 through 180) before expiration to
begin warning the user about the pending expiration:
When you configure the password-management command, the ASA notifies the remote user at login that
the user’s current password is about to expire or has expired. The ASA then offers the user the opportunity
to change the password. If the current password has not yet expired, the user can still log in using that password.
The ASA ignores this command if RADIUS or LDAP authentication has not been configured.
Note that this does not change the number of days before the password expires, but rather, the number of days
ahead of expiration that the ASA starts warning the user that the password is about to expire.
If you do specify the password-expire-in-days keyword, you must also specify the number of days.
Specifying this command with the number of days set to 0 disables this command. The ASA does not notify
the user of the pending expiration, but the user can change the password after it expires.
See Configure Microsoft Active Directory Settings for Password Management, on page 113 for more
information.
The ASA Version 7.1 and later generally supports password management for the AnyConnect VPN Client,
the Cisco IPsec VPN Client, the SSL VPN full-tunneling client, and Clientless connections when authenticating
with LDAP or with any RADIUS connection that supports MS-CHAPv2. Password management is not
supported for any of these connection types for Kerberos/AD (Windows password) or NT 4.0 Domain.
Some RADIUS servers that support MS-CHAP do not currently support MS-CHAPv2. The
password-management command requires MS-CHAPv2, so please check with your vendor.
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Note The RADIUS server (for example, Cisco ACS) could proxy the authentication request to another
authentication server. However, from the ASA perspective, it is talking only to a RADIUS server.
For LDAP, the method to change a password is proprietary for the different LDAP servers on the
market. Currently, the ASA implements the proprietary password management logic only for
Microsoft Active Directory and Sun LDAP servers. Native LDAP requires an SSL connection. You
must enable LDAP over SSL before attempting to do password management for LDAP. By default,
LDAP uses port 636.
Step 10
Step 11 Specify the attribute or attributes to use in deriving a name for an authorization query from a certificate. This
attribute specifies what part of the subject DN field to use as the username for authorization:
For example, the following command specifies the use of the CN attribute as the username for authorization:
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# authorization-dn-attributes CN
hostname(config-tunnel-general)#
The authorization-dn-attributes are C (Country), CN (Common Name), DNQ (DN qualifier), EA (E-mail
Address), GENQ (Generational qualifier), GN (Given Name), I (Initials), L (Locality), N (Name), O
(Organization), OU (Organizational Unit), SER (Serial Number), SN (Surname), SP (State/Province), T
(Title), UID (User ID), and UPN (User Principal Name).
Step 12 Specify whether to require a successful authorization before allowing a user to connect. The default is not to
require authorization.
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# authorization-required
hostname(config-tunnel-general)#
Procedure
Step 1 Specify the secondary authentication server group. This command specifies the AAA server group to use as
the secondary AAA server.
Note This command applies only to AnyConnect client VPN connections.
The secondary server group cannot specify an SDI server group. By default, no secondary authentication is
required.
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If you use the none keyword, no secondary authentication is required. The groupname value specifies the
AAA server group name. Local specifies the use of the internal server database, and when used with the
groupname value, LOCAL specifies fallback.
For example, to set the primary authentication server group to sdi_group and the secondary authentication
server group to ldap_server, enter the following commands:
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# authentication-server-group
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# secondary-authentication-server-group
Note If you use the use-primary-name keyword, then the login dialog requests only one username. In
addition, if the usernames are extracted from a digital certificate, only the primary username is used
for authentication.
The values for the DN fields to extract from the certificate for use as a secondary username are the same as
for the primary username-from-certificate command. Alternatively, you can specify the use-script keyword,
which directs the ASA to use a script file generated by ASDM.
For example, to specify the Common Name as the primary username field and Organizational Unit as the
secondary username field, enter the following commands:
Step 3 Use the secondary-pre-fill-username command in tunnel-group webvpn-attributes mode to enable extracting
a secondary username from a client certificate for use in authentication. Use the keywords to specify whether
this command applies to a clientless connection or an SSL VPN (AnyConnect) client connection and whether
you want to hide the extracted username from the end user. This feature is disabled by default. Clientless and
SSL-client options can both exist at the same time, but you must configure them in separate commands.
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# secondary-pre-fill-username-from-certificate
{clientless | ssl-client} [hide]
For example, to specify the use of pre-fill-username for both the primary and secondary authentication for a
connection, enter the following commands:
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Step 4 Specify which authentication server to use to obtain the authorization attributes to apply to the connection.
The primary authentication server is the default selection. This command is meaningful only for double
authentication.
For example, to specify the use of the secondary authentication server, enter the following commands:
Step 5 Specify which authentication username, primary or secondary, to associate with the session. The default value
is primary. With double authentication enabled, it is possible that two distinct usernames are authenticated
for the session. The administrator must designate one of the authenticated usernames as the session username.
The session username is the username provided for accounting, session database, syslogs, and debug output.
For example, to specify that the authentication username associated with the session must come from the
secondary authentication server, enter the following commands:
Procedure
Step 1 To specify the IPsec attributes of an remote-access tunnel-group, enter tunnel-group ipsec-attributes mode by
entering the following command in either single or multiple context mode. The prompt changes to indicate
the mode change.
This command enters tunnel-group ipsec-attributes configuration mode, in which you configure the
remote-access tunnel-group IPsec attributes in either single or multiple context mode.
For example, the following command designates that the tunnel-group ipsec-attributes mode commands that
follow pertain to the connection profile named TG1. Notice that the prompt changes to indicate that you are
now in tunnel-group ipsec-attributes mode:
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Step 2 Specify the preshared key to support IKEv1 connections based on preshared keys. For example, the following
command specifies the preshared key xyzx to support IKEv1 connections for an IPsec IKEv1 remote access
connection profile:
Step 3 Specify whether to validate the identity of the peer using the peer’s certificate:
The possible option values are req (required), cert (if supported by certificate), and nocheck (do not check).
The default is req.
For example, the following command specifies that peer-id validation is required:
Step 4 Specify whether to enable sending of a certificate chain. The following command includes the root certificate
and any subordinate CA certificates in the transmission:
hostname(config-tunnel-ipsec)# chain
hostname(config-tunnel-ipsec)#
Step 5 Specify the name of a trustpoint that identifies the certificate to be sent to the IKE peer:
The following command specifies mytrustpoint as the name of the certificate to be sent to the IKE peer:
Step 6 Specify the ISAKMP keepalive threshold and the number of retries allowed:
The threshold parameter specifies the number of seconds (10 through 3600) that the peer is allowed to idle
before beginning keepalive monitoring. The retry parameter is the interval (2 through 10 seconds) between
retries after a keepalive response has not been received. IKE keepalives are enabled by default. To disable
ISAKMP keepalives, enter isakmp keepalive disable.
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For example, the following command sets the IKE keepalive threshold value to 15 seconds and sets the retry
interval to 10 seconds:
The default value for the threshold parameter is 300 for remote-access and 10 for LAN-to-LAN, and the
default value for the retry parameter is 2.
To specify that the central site (secure gateway) should never initiate ISAKMP monitoring, enter the following
command:
Step 7 Specify the ISAKMP hybrid authentication method, XAUTH or hybrid XAUTH.
You use isakmp ikev1-user-authentication command to implement hybrid XAUTH authentication when
you need to use digital certificates for ASA authentication and a different, legacy method for remote VPN
user authentication, such as RADIUS, TACACS+ or SecurID. Hybrid XAUTH breaks phase 1 of IKE down
into the following two steps, together called hybrid authentication:
a) The ASA authenticates to the remote VPN user with standard public key techniques. This establishes an
IKE security association that is unidirectionally authenticated.
b) An XAUTH exchange then authenticates the remote VPN user. This extended authentication can use one
of the supported legacy authentication methods.
Note Before the authentication type can be set to hybrid, you must configure the authentication server,
create a preshared key, and configure a trustpoint.
You can use the isakmp ikev1-user-authentication command with the optional interface parameter to
specify a particular interface. When you omit the interface parameter, the command applies to all the
interfaces and serves as a back-up when the per-interface command is not specified. When there are two
isakmp ikev1-user-authentication commands specified for a connection profile, and one uses the interface
parameter and one does not, the one specifying the interface takes precedence for that particular interface.
For example, the following commands enable hybrid XAUTH on the inside interface for a connection
profile called example-group:
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Procedure
Step 1 Enter tunnel-group ppp-attributes configuration mode, in which you configure the remote-access tunnel-group
PPP attributes, by entering the following command. The prompt changes to indicate the mode change:
For example, the following command designates that the tunnel-group ppp-attributes mode commands that
follow pertain to the connection profile named TG1. Notice that the prompt changes to indicate that you are
now in tunnel-group ppp-attributes mode:
Step 2 Specify whether to enable authentication using specific protocols for the PPP connection. The protocol value
can be any of the following:
• pap—Enables the use of Password Authentication Protocol for the PPP connection.
• chap—Enables the use of Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol for the PPP connection.
• ms-chap-v1 or ms-chap-v2—Enables the use of Microsoft Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol,
version 1 or version 2 for the PPP connection.
• eap—Enables the use of Extensible Authentication protocol for the PPP connection.
To disable authentication for a specific protocol, use the no form of the command:
For example, the following command enables the use of the PAP protocol for a PPP connection:
The following command enables the use of the MS-CHAP, version 2 protocol for a PPP connection:
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The following command enables the use of the EAP-PROXY protocol for a PPP connection:
The following command disables the use of the MS-CHAP, version 1 protocol for a PPP connection:
LAN-to-LAN connection profiles have fewer parameters than remote-access connection profiles, and most
of these are the same for both groups. For your convenience in configuring the connection, they are listed
separately here. Any parameters that you do not explicitly configure inherit their values from the default
connection profile.
For a LAN-to-LAN tunnel, the type is ipsec-l2l.; for example, to create the LAN-to-LAN connection profile
named docs, enter the following command:
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Configure LAN-to-LAN Connection Profile General Attributes
Procedure
Step 1 Enter tunnel-group general-attributes mode by specifying the general-attributes keyword in either single or
multiple context mode:
tunnel-group tunnel-group-name general-attributes
Example:
For the connection profile named docs, enter the following command:
The prompt changes to indicate that you are now in config-general mode, in which you configure the
tunnel-group general attributes.
Procedure
Step 1 To configure the tunnel-group IPsec IKEv1 attributes, enter tunnel-group ipsec-attributes configuration mode
by entering the tunnel-group command with the IPsec-attributes keyword in either single or multiple context
mode.
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For example, the following command enters config-ipsec mode so that you can configure the parameters for
the connection profile named TG1:
The prompt changes to indicate that you are now in tunnel-group ipsec-attributes configuration mode.
Step 2 Specify the preshared key to support IKEv1 connections based on preshared keys.
For example, the following command specifies the preshared key XYZX to support IKEv1 connections for
an LAN-to-LAN connection profile:
Step 3 Specify whether to validate the identity of the peer using the peer’s certificate:
The available options are req (required), cert (if supported by certificate), and nocheck (do not check). The
default is req. For example, the following command sets the peer-id-validate option to nocheck:
Step 4 Specify whether to enable sending of a certificate chain. This action includes the root certificate and any
subordinate CA certificates in the transmission:
hostname(config-tunnel-ipsec)# chain
hostname(config-tunnel-ipsec)#
Step 5 Specify the name of a trustpoint that identifies the certificate to be sent to the IKE peer:
For example, the following command sets the trustpoint name to mytrustpoint:
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Step 6 Specify the ISAKMP (IKE) keepalive threshold and the number of retries allowed. The threshold parameter
specifies the number of seconds (10 through 3600) that the peer is allowed to idle before beginning keepalive
monitoring. The retry parameter is the interval (2 through 10 seconds) between retries after a keepalive
response has not been received. IKE keepalives are enabled by default. To disable IKE keepalives, enter the
no form of the isakmp command:
For example, the following command sets the ISAKMP keepalive threshold to 15 seconds and sets the retry
interval to 10 seconds:
The default value for the threshold parameter for LAN-to-LAN is 10, and the default value for the retry
parameter is 2.
To specify that the central site (secure gateway) should never initiate ISAKMP monitoring, enter the following
command:
Step 7 Specify the ISAKMP hybrid authentication method, XAUTH or hybrid XAUTH.
You use isakmp ikev1-user-authentication command to implement hybrid XAUTH authentication when
you need to use digital certificates for ASA authentication and a different, legacy method for remote VPN
user authentication, such as RADIUS, TACACS+ or SecurID. Hybrid XAUTH breaks phase 1 of IKE down
into the following two steps, together called hybrid authentication:
a) The ASA authenticates to the remote VPN user with standard public key techniques. This establishes an
IKE security association that is unidirectionally authenticated.
b) An XAUTH exchange then authenticates the remote VPN user. This extended authentication can use one
of the supported legacy authentication methods.
Note Before the authentication type can be set to hybrid, you must configure the authentication server,
create a preshared key, and configure a trustpoint.
For example, the following commands enable hybrid XAUTH for a connection profile called
example-group:
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Configure Connection Profiles for Clientless SSL VPN Sessions
Procedure
Step 1 To configure the general attributes, enter tunnel-group general-attributes command, which enters tunnel-group
general-attributes configuration mode in either single or multiple context mode. Note that the prompt changes:
To configure the general attributes for TunnelGroup3, created in the previous section, enter the following
command:
Step 2 Specify the name of the authentication-server group, if any, to use. If you want to use the LOCAL database
for authentication if the specified server group fails, append the keyword LOCAL:
For example, to configure the authentication server group named test, and to provide fallback to the LOCAL
server if the authentication server group fails, enter the following command:
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Note The ASA’s outside interface address (for both IPv4/IPv6) cannot overlap with the private side
address space.
Other interfaces you have configured (using the interface command) are also available. The following
command configures interface-specific authentication for the interface named outside using the server
servergroup1 for authentication:
Step 3 Optionally, specify the name of the authorization-server group, if any, to use. If you are not using authorization,
go to Step 6. When you configure this value, users must exist in the authorization database to connect:
Use the aaa-server command to configure authorization servers. The maximum length of the group tag is 16
characters.
For example, the following command specifies the use of the authorization-server group FinGroup:
Step 4 Specify whether to require a successful authorization before allowing a user to connect. The default is not to
require authorization.
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# authorization-required
hostname(config-tunnel-general)#
Step 5 Specify the attribute or attributes to use in deriving a name for an authorization query from a certificate. This
attribute specifies what part of the subject DN field to use as the username for authorization:
For example, the following command specifies the use of the CN attribute as the username for authorization:
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# authorization-dn-attributes CN
hostname(config-tunnel-general)#
The authorization-dn-attributes are C (Country), CN (Common Name), DNQ (DN qualifier), EA (E-mail
Address), GENQ (Generational qualifier), GN (Given Name), I (Initials), L (Locality), N (Name), O
(Organization), OU (Organizational Unit), SER (Serial Number), SN (Surname), SP (State/Province), T
(Title), UID (User ID), and UPN (User Principal Name).
Step 6 Optionally, specify the name of the accounting-server group, if any, to use. If you are not using accounting,
go to Step 7. Use the aaa-server command to configure accounting servers. The maximum length of the group
tag is 16 characters.:
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hostname(config-tunnel-general)#
For example, the following command specifies the use of the accounting-server group comptroller:
Step 7 Optionally, specify the name of the default group policy. The default value is DfltGrpPolicy:
The following example sets MyDfltGrpPolicy as the name of the default group policy:
Step 8 Optionally, specify the name or IP address of the DHCP server (up to 10 servers), and the names of the DHCP
address pools (up to 6 pools). Separate the list items with spaces. The defaults are no DHCP server and no
address pool.
Step 9 Optionally, if your server is a RADIUS, RADIUS with NT, or LDAP server, you can enable password
management.
Note If you are using an LDAP directory server for authentication, password management is supported
with the Sun Microsystems JAVA System Directory Server (formerly named the Sun ONE Directory
Server) and the Microsoft Active Directory.
• Sun—The DN configured on the ASA to access a Sun directory server must be able to access
the default password policy on that server. We recommend using the directory administrator,
or a user with directory administrator privileges, as the DN. Alternatively, you can place an
ACI on the default password policy.
• Microsoft—You must configure LDAP over SSL to enable password management with
Microsoft Active Directory.
This feature, which is enabled by default, warns a user when the current password is about to expire. The
default is to begin warning the user 14 days before expiration:
hostname(config-tunnel-general)# password-management
hostname(config-tunnel-general)#
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If the server is an LDAP server, you can specify the number of days (0 through 180) before expiration to
begin warning the user about the pending expiration:
When you configure this command, the ASA notifies the remote user at login that the user’s current password
is about to expire or has expired. The ASA then offers the user the opportunity to change the password. If the
current password has not yet expired, the user can still log in using that password. The ASA ignores this
command if RADIUS or LDAP authentication has not been configured.
Note that this does not change the number of days before the password expires, but rather, the number of days
ahead of expiration that the ASA starts warning the user that the password is about to expire.
If you do specify the password-expire-in-days keyword, you must also specify the number of days.
See Configure Microsoft Active Directory Settings for Password Management, on page 113 for more
information.
Procedure
Step 1 To specify the attributes of a clientless SSL VPN tunnel-group, enter tunnel-group webvpn-attributes mode
by entering the following command. The prompt changes to indicate the mode change:
For example, to specify the webvpn-attributes for the clientless SSL VPN tunnel-group named sales, enter
the following command:
Step 2 To specify the authentication method to use: AAA, digital certificates, or both, enter the authentication
command. You can specify either aaa or certificate or both, in any order.
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For example, The following command allows both AAA and certificate authentication:
Step 3 The ASA queries NetBIOS name servers to map NetBIOS names to IP addresses. Clientless SSL VPN requires
NetBIOS to access or share files on remote systems. Clientless SSL VPN uses NetBIOS and the CIFS protocol
to access or share files on remote systems. When you attempt a file-sharing connection to a Windows computer
by using its computer name, the file server you specify corresponds to a specific NetBIOS name that identifies
a resource on the network.
To make the NBNS function operational, you must configure at least one NetBIOS server (host). You can
configure up to three NBNS servers for redundancy. The ASA uses the first server on the list for NetBIOS/CIFS
name resolution. If the query fails, it uses the next server.
To specify the name of the NBNS (NetBIOS Name Service) server to use for CIFS name resolution, use the
nbns-server command. You can enter up to three server entries. The first server you configure is the primary
server, and the others are backups, for redundancy. You can also specify whether this is a master browser
(rather than just a WINS server), the timeout interval, and the number of retries. A WINS server or a master
browser is typically on the same network as the ASA, or reachable from that network. You must specify the
timeout interval before the number of retries:
For example, to configure the server named nbnsprimary as the primary server and the server 192.168.2.2 as
the secondary server, each allowing three retries and having a 5-second timeout, enter the following command:
The timeout interval can range from 1 through 30 seconds (default 2), and the number of retries can be in the
range 0 through 10 (default 2).
The nbns-server command in tunnel-group webvpn-attributes configuration mode replaces the deprecated
nbns-server command in webvpn configuration mode.
Step 4 To specify alternative names for the group, use the group-alias command. Specifying the group alias creates
one or more alternate names by which the user can refer to a tunnel-group. The group alias that you specify
here appears in the drop-down list on the user’s login page. Each group can have multiple aliases or no alias,
each specified in separate commands. This feature is useful when the same group is known by several common
names, such as “Devtest” and “QA.”
For each group alias, enter a group-alias command. Each alias is enabled by default. You can optionally
explicitly enable or disable each alias:
For example, to enable the aliases QA and Devtest for a tunnel-group named QA, enter the following commands:
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Note The webvpn tunnel-group-list must be enabled for the (dropdown) group list to appear.
For a more extensive example, see Customize Login Windows for Users of Clientless SSL VPN Sessions, on
page 107.
A Load Balancing deployment that uses Group URLs for AnyConnect client connectivity, requires each ASA
node in the cluster to configure a Group URL for the virtual cluster address, as well as a Group URL for the
node's Load Balancing public address.
Example:
Configure group-urls appropriately for a load balancing deployment with two ASA nodes in a cluster whose
addresses are as follows:
• Virtual IP for Load Balancing = https://vip-vpn.example.com/groupname
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• ASA1 = https://asa1.example.com/groupname
• ASA2 = https://asa2.example.com/groupname
The Tunnel-Group configuration on ASA1 must have the following group-url's configured:
The Tunnel-Group configuration on ASA2 must have the following group-url's configured:
Step 6 (Optional.) To exempt certain users from running the Hostscan application of Cisco Secure Desktop on a per
connection profile basis if they enter one of the group URLs, enter the following command:
Entering this command prevents the detection of endpoint conditions for these sessions, so you may need to
adjust the dynamic access policy (DAP) configuration.
Include the anyconnect keyword if you want to limit the exemption to AnyConnect connections only. If you
do not include the keyword, the exemption applies to clientless, Layer 3, and AnyConnect connections.
Step 7 To specify the DNS server group to use for a connection profile for clientless SSL VPN sessions, use the
dns-group command. The group you specify must be one you already configured in global configuration mode
(using the dns server-group and name-server commands).
By default, the connection profile uses the DNS server group DefaultDNS. However, this group must be
configured before the security appliance can resolve DNS requests.
The following example configures a new DNS server group named corp_dns and specifies that server group
for the connection profile telecommuters:
Step 8 (Optional) To enable extracting a username from a client certificate for use in authentication and authorization,
use the pre-fill-username command in tunnel-group webvpn-attributes mode.
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The pre-fill-username command enables the use of a username extracted from the certificate field specified
in the username-from-certificate command (in tunnel-group general-attributes mode) as the username for
username/password authentication and authorization. To use this pre-fill username from certificate feature,
you must configure both commands.
Note In Version 8.0.4, the username is not pre-filled; instead, any data sent in the username field is
ignored.
The following example, entered in global configuration mode, creates an IPsec remote access tunnel group
named remotegrp, enables getting the username from a certificate, and specifies that the name for an
authentication or authorization query for an SSL VPN client must be derived from a digital certificate:
Step 9 (Optional) To specify whether to override the group policy or username attributes configuration for downloading
an AnyConnect or SSL VPN client, use the override-svc-download command. This feature is disabled by
default.
The security appliance allows clientless or AnyConnect client connections for remote users based on whether
clientless and/or SSL VPN is enabled in the group policy or username attributes with the vpn-tunnel-protocol
command. The anyconnect ask command further modifies the client user experience by prompting the user
to download the client or return to the WebVPN home page.
However, you might want clientless users logging in under specific tunnel groups to not experience delays
waiting for the download prompt to expire before being presented with the clientless SSL VPN home page.
You can prevent delays for these users at the connection profile level with the override-svc-download
command. This command causes users logging through a connection profile to be immediately presented with
the clientless SSL VPN home page regardless of the vpn-tunnel-protocol or anyconnect ask command
settings.
In the following example, you enter tunnel-group webvpn attributes configuration mode for the connection
profile engineering and enable the connection profile to override the group policy and username attribute
settings for client download prompts:
Step 10 (Optional) To enable the display of a RADIUS reject message on the login screen when authentication is
rejected, use the radius-eject-message command.
The following example enables the display of a RADIUS rejection message for the connection profile named
engineering:
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Customize Login Windows for Users of Clientless SSL VPN Sessions
For example, to use the customization named blueborder, enter the following command:
You configure the customization itself by entering the customization command in webvpn mode.
The following example shows a command sequence that first establishes a customization named 123 that
defines a password prompt. The example then defines a group policy named testpolicy and uses the
customization command to specify the use of the customization named 123 for clientless SSL VPN sessions:
hostname(config)# webvpn
hostname(config-webvpn)# customization 123
hostname(config-webvpn-custom)# password-prompt Enter password
hostname(config-webvpn)# exit
hostname(config)# group-policy testpolicy nopassword
hostname(config)# group-policy testpolicy attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# webvpn
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# customization value 123
hostname(config-group-webvpn)#
You can set up different login windows for different groups by using a combination of customization profiles
and connection profiles. For example, assuming that you had created a customization profile called salesgui,
you can create a connection profile for clientless SSL VPN sessions called sales that uses that customization
profile, as the following example shows:
Procedure
Step 1 In webvpn mode, define a customization for clientless SSL VPN access, in this case named salesgui and
change the default logo to mycompanylogo.gif. You must have previously loaded mycompanylogo.gif onto
the flash memory of the ASA and saved the configuration. See Clientless SSL VPN Overview, on page 257
for details.
hostname# webvpn
hostname (config-webvpn)# customization value salesgui
hostname(config-webvpn-custom)# logo file disk0:\mycompanylogo.gif
hostname(config-webvpn-custom)#
Step 2 In global configuration mode, set up a username and associate with it the customization for clientless SSL
VPN that you have just defined:
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About Tunnel Groups for Standards-based IKEv2 Clients
Step 3 In global configuration mode, create a tunnel-group for clientless SSL VPN sessions named sales:
Step 4 Specify that you want to use the salesgui customization for this connection profile:
Step 5 Set the group URL to the address that the user enters into the browser to log in to the ASA; for example, if
the ASA has the IP address 192.168.3.3, set the group URL to https://192.168.3.3:
If a port number is required for a successful login, include the port number, preceded by a colon. The ASA
maps this URL to the sales connection profile and applies the salesgui customization profile to the login screen
that the user sees upon logging in to https://192.168.3.3.
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DAP Support
Note Dual stack (assignment of both an IPv4 and IPv6 address) is not supported for
IKEv2. If both an IPv4 and an IPv6 address are requested and both addresses
may be assigned, only an IPv4 address is assigned.
DAP Support
To allow DAP policy configuration per connection type, a new Client Type, IPsec-IKEv2-Generic-RA, can
be used to apply specific policy for this connection type.
Remote Access Tunnel Group Group URL Certificate DN Default Group Other
Client List Matching
(DefaultRAGroup)
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Authentication Support for Standards-based IKEv2 Clients
Note Authentication method limitations are based on lack of support on the client, not on the ASA. All EAP method
authentication is proxied by the ASA between the client and EAP server. EAP method support is based on
client and EAP server support for the EAP method.
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Configure the query-identity Option for Retrieval of EAP Identity
You can obtain the certificates from the Microsoft Certificate Server or other CA server.
For EAP authentication, the Microsoft Windows 7 IKEv2 client expects an EAP identity request before any
other EAP requests. Make sure that you configure the query-identity keyword in the tunnel group profile on
the IKEv2 ASA server to send an EAP identity request to the client.
Note DHCP intercept is supported for IKEv2 to allow Windows to do split-tunneling. This feature only works with
IPv4 split-tunneling attributes.
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Procedure
Step 1 To set the connection type to IPsec remote access, enter the tunnel-group command. The syntax is
tunnel-group name type type, where name is the name you assign to the tunnel group, and type is the type
of tunnel:
In the following example, the IKEv2 preshared key is configured as 44kkaol59636jnfx:
Note You must configure the ikev2 remote-authentication pre-shared-key command or ikev2
remote-authentication certificate command to complete the authentication.
Step 2 To specify Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) as the method that supports user authentication with
standards-based, third-party IKEv2 remote access clients, use the ikev2 remote-authentication eap
[query-identity] command.
Note Before you can enable EAP for remote authentication, you must configure local authentication using
a certificate and configure a valid trustpoint using the ikev2 local-authentication {certificate
trustpoint} command. Otherwise, the EAP authentication request is rejected.
You may configure multiple options that allow the client to use any of the configured options, but
not all, for remote authentication.
For IKEv2 connections, the tunnel group mapping must know which authentication methods to
allow for remote authentication (PSK, certificate, and EAP) and local authentication (PSK and
certificate), and which trust point to use for local authentication. Currently, mapping is performed
using the IKE ID, which is taken from the peer or peer certificate field value (using the certificate
map). If both options fail, then the in-coming connection is mapped to the default remote access
tunnel group, DefaultRAGroup. A certificate map is an applicable option only when the remote
peer is authenticated via a certificate. This map allows mapping to different tunnel groups. For
certificate authentication only, the tunnel group lookup is performed using rules or using the default
setting. For EAP and PSK authentication, the tunnel group lookup is performed using the IKE ID
on the client (it matches the tunnel group name) or using the default setting.
For EAP authentication, you must use the DefaultRAGroup tunnel group unless the client allows
the IKE ID and username to be configured independently.
The following example shows an EAP request for authentication being denied:
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Configure Microsoft Active Directory Settings for Password Management
To verify that the tunnel is up and running, use the show vpn-sessiondb summary or show crypto ipsec sa
command.
To use password management with Microsoft Active Directory, you must set certain Active Directory
parameters as well as configuring password management on the ASA. This section describes the Active
Directory settings associated with various password management actions. These descriptions assume that you
have also enabled password management on the ASA and configured the corresponding password management
attributes. The specific steps in this section refer to Active Directory terminology under Windows 2000. This
section assumes that you are using an LDAP directory server for authentication.
Use Active Directory to Force the User to Change Password at Next Logon
To force a user to change the user password at the next logon, specify the password-management command
in tunnel-group general-attributes configuration mode on the ASA and perform the following steps under
Active Directory:
Procedure
Step 1 Choose Start > Programs > Administrative Tools > Active Directory Users and Computers.
Step 2 Right-click to choose Username > Properties > Account.
Step 3 Check the User must change password at next logon check box.
The next time this user logs on, the ASA displays the following prompt: “New password required. Password
change required. You must enter a new password with a minimum length n to continue.” You can set the
minimum required password length, n, as part of the Active Directory configuration at Start > Programs >
Administrative Tools > Domain Security Policy > Windows Settings > Security Settings > Account Policies >
Password Policy. Select Minimum password length.
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Use Active Directory to Enforce Minimum Password Length
Note The radius-with-expiry command, formerly configured as part of tunnel-group remote-access configuration
to perform the password age function, is deprecated. The password-management command, entered in
tunnel-group general-attributes mode, replaces it.
Procedure
Step 1 Choose Start > Programs > Administrative Tools > Domain Security Policy > Windows Settings >
Security Settings > Account Policies > Password Policy.
Step 2 Double-click Maximum password age.
Step 3 Check the Define this policy setting check box and specify the maximum password age, in days, that you
want to allow.
Procedure
Step 1 Chose Start > Programs > Administrative Tools > Domain Security Policy.
Step 2 Chose Windows Settings > Security Settings > Account Policies > Password Policy.
Step 3 Double-click Minimum Password Length.
Step 4 Check the Define this policy setting check box and specify the minimum number of characters that the
password must contain.
Procedure
Step 1 Choose Start > Programs > Administrative Tools > Domain Security Policy. Select Windows Settings >
Security Settings > Account Policies > Password Policy.
Step 2 Double-click Password must meet complexity requirements to open the Security Policy Setting dialog box.
Step 3 Check the Define this policy setting check box and select Enable.
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Configure the Connection Profile for RADIUS/SDI Message Support for the AnyConnect Client
Enforcing password complexity takes effect only when the user changes passwords; for example, when you
have configured Enforce password change at next login or Password expires in n days. At login, the user
receives a prompt to enter a new password, and the system will accept only a complex password.
Configure the Connection Profile for RADIUS/SDI Message Support for the
AnyConnect Client
This section describes procedures to ensure that the AnyConnect VPN client using RSA SecureID Software
tokens can properly respond to user prompts delivered to the client through a RADIUS server proxying to an
SDI server(s).
Note If you have configured the double-authentication feature, SDI authentication is supported only on the primary
authentication server.
When a remote user connects to the ASA with the AnyConnect VPN client and attempts to authenticate using
an RSA SecurID token, the ASA communicates with the RADIUS server, which in turn, communicates with
the SDI server about the authentication.
During authentication, the RADIUS server presents access challenge messages to the ASA. Within these
challenge messages are reply messages containing text from the SDI server. The message text is different
when the ASA is communicating directly with an SDI server than when communicating through the RADIUS
proxy. Therefore, in order to appear as a native SDI server to the AnyConnect client, the ASA must interpret
the messages from the RADIUS server.
Also, because the SDI messages are configurable on the SDI server, the message text on the ASA must match
(in whole or in part) the message text on the SDI server. Otherwise, the prompts displayed to the remote client
user may not be appropriate for the action required during authentication. The AnyConnect client may fail to
respond and authentication may fail.
Configure the Security Appliance to Support RADIUS/SDI Messages, on page 115 describes how to configure
the ASA to ensure successful authentication between the client and the SDI server.
Procedure
Step 1 Configure a connection profile (tunnel group) to forward RADIUS reply messages in a manner that simulates
direct communication with an SDI server using the proxy-auth sdi command from tunnel-group webvpn
configuration mode. Users authenticating to the SDI server must connect over this connection profile.
Example:
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Configure the Security Appliance to Support RADIUS/SDI Messages
Step 2 Configure the RADIUS reply message text on the ASA to match (in whole or in part) the message text sent
by the RADIUS server with the proxy-auth_map sdi command from tunnel-group webvpn configuration
mode.
The default message text used by the ASA is the default message text used by Cisco Secure Access Control
Server (ACS). If you are using Cisco Secure ACS, and it is using the default message text, you do not need
to configure the message text on the ASA. Otherwise, use the proxy-auth_map sdi command to ensure the
message text matches.
The table below shows the message code, the default RADIUS reply message text, and the function of each
message. Because the security appliance searches for strings in the order that they appear in the table, you
must ensure that the string you use for the message text is not a subset of another string.
For example, “new PIN” is a subset of the default message text for both new-pin-sup and next-ccode-and-reauth.
If you configure new-pin-sup as “new PIN,” when the security appliance receives “new PIN with the next
card code” from the RADIUS server, it will match the text to the new-pin-sup code instead of the
next-ccode-and-reauth code.
SDI Op-codes, Default Message Text, and Message Function
next-code Enter Next PASSCODE Indicates the user must enter the
NEXT tokencode without the PIN.
new-pin-sup Please remember your new PIN Indicates the new system PIN has
been supplied and displays that PIN
for the user.
new-pin-meth Do you want to enter your own pin Requests from the user which new
PIN method to use to create a new
PIN.
next-ccode-and-reauth new PIN with the next card code Follows a PIN operation and
indicates the user must wait for the
next tokencode and to enter both
the new PIN and next tokencode to
authenticate.
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Group Policies
The following example enters aaa-server-host mode and changes the text for the RADIUS reply message
new-pin-sup:
Group Policies
This section describes group policies and how to configure them.
A group policy is a set of user-oriented attribute/value pairs for IPsec connections that are stored either
internally (locally) on the device or externally on a RADIUS server. The connection profile uses a group
policy that sets terms for user connections after the tunnel is established. Group policies let you apply whole
sets of attributes to a user or a group of users, rather than having to specify each attribute individually for each
user.
Enter the group-policy commands in global configuration mode to assign a group policy to users or to modify
a group policy for specific users.
The ASA includes a default group policy. In addition to the default group policy, which you can modify but
not delete, you can create one or more group policies specific to your environment.
You can configure internal and external group policies. Internal groups are configured on the ASA’s internal
database. External groups are configured on an external authentication server, such as RADIUS. Group policies
include the following attributes:
• Identity
• Server definitions
• Client firewall settings
• Tunneling protocols
• IPsec settings
• Hardware client settings
• Filters
• Client configuration settings
• Connection settings
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Modify the Default Group Policy
Note AnyConnect profiles, including any or all AnyConnect Profile Types (such as Network Access Manager,
Umbrella, and so on), that are configured on (and then assigned to) the DfltGrpPolicy, are not inherited by
other group policies, unless the other group policies explicitly are configured to inherit from the DfltGrpPolicy.
In other words, AnyConnect profiles that are associated with the DfltGrpPolicy are not inherited when specific
AnyConnect profiles are configured on a group policy.
Note The default group policy is always internal. Despite the fact that the command syntax is hostname(config)#
group-policy DfltGrpPolicy {internal | external}, you cannot change its type to external.
To change any of the attributes of the default group policy, use the group-policy attributes command to enter
attributes mode, then specify the commands to change whatever attributes that you want to modify:
The default group policy, DfltGrpPolicy, that the ASA provides is as follows:
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Modify the Default Group Policy
pfs disable
ipsec-udp disable
ipsec-udp-port 10000
split-tunnel-policy tunnelall
ipv6-split-tunnel-policy tunnelall
split-tunnel-network-list none
default-domain value cisco.com
split-dns none
split-tunnel-all-dns disable
intercept-dhcp 255.255.255.255 disable
secure-unit-authentication disable
user-authentication disable
user-authentication-idle-timeout 30
ip-phone-bypass disable
client-bypass-protocol disable
gateway-fqdn none
leap-bypass disable
nem disable
backup-servers keep-client-config
msie-proxy server none
msie-proxy method no-modify
msie-proxy except-list none
msie-proxy local-bypass disable
msie-proxy pac-url none
msie-proxy lockdown enable
vlan none
nac-settings none
address-pools none
ipv6-address-pools none
smartcard-removal-disconnect enable
scep-forwarding-url none
client-firewall none
client-access-rule none
webvpn
url-list none
filter none
homepage none
html-content-filter none
port-forward name Application Access
port-forward disable
http-proxy disable
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Configure Group Policies
You can modify the default group policy, and you can also create one or more group policies specific to your
environment.
Note Multiple-context mode applies only to IKEv2 and IKEv1 site to site and does not apply to AnyConnect,
Clientless SSL VPN, the Apple native VPN client, the Microsoft native VPN client, or cTCP for IKEv1 IPsec.
Note External group names on the ASA refer to user names on the RADIUS server. In other words, if you configure
external group X on the ASA, the RADIUS server sees the query as an authentication request for user X. So
external groups are really just user accounts on the RADIUS server that have special meaning to the ASA. If
your external group attributes exist in the same RADIUS server as the users that you plan to authenticate,
there must be no name duplication between them.
The ASA supports user authorization on an external LDAP or RADIUS server. Before you configure the ASA
to use an external server, you must configure the server with the correct ASA authorization attributes and,
from a subset of these attributes, assign specific permissions to individual users. Follow the instructions in
Configure an External AAA Server for VPN, on page 243 to configure your external server.
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Create an Internal Group Policy
Procedure
To configure an external group policy, perform the following step and specify a name and type for the group
policy, along with the server-group name and a password:
Note For an external group policy, RADIUS is the only supported AAA server type.
For example, the following command creates an external group policy named ExtGroup that gets its attributes
from an external RADIUS server named ExtRAD and specifies that the password to use when retrieving the
attributes is newpassword:
Note You can configure several vendor-specific attributes (VSAs), as described in Configure an External
AAA Server for VPN, on page 243. If a RADIUS server is configured to return the Class attribute
(#25), the ASA uses that attribute to authenticate the Group Name. On the RADIUS server, the
attribute must be formatted as: OU=groupname; where groupname is identical to the Group Name
configured on the ASA—for example, OU=Finance.
For example, the following command creates the internal group policy named GroupPolicy1:
Note You cannot change the name of a group policy after you create it.
You can configure the attributes of an internal group policy by copying the values of a preexisting group
policy by appending the keyword from and specifying the name of the existing policy:
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Configure General Internal Group Policy Attributes
For example, the following command creates the internal group policy named GroupPolicy2 by copying the
attributes of GroupPolicy1:
Note A carriage-return and line-feed included in the banner counts as two characters.
To delete a banner, enter the no form of this command. Be aware that using the no version of the command
deletes all banners for the group policy.
A group policy can inherit this value from another group policy. To prevent inheriting a value, enter the none
keyword instead of specifying a value for the banner string, as follows:
The following example shows how to create a banner for the group policy named FirstGroup:
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Assign an IPv4 Address Pool to an Internal Group Policy
Procedure
hostname> en
hostname# config t
hostname(config)# group-policy FirstGroup attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)#
Step 2 Assign the address pool named ipv4-pool1, ipv4-pool2, and ipv4pool3 to the FirstGroup group policy. You
are allowed to specify up to 6 address pools for group-policy.
address-pools value pool-name1 pool-name2 pool-name6
Example:
asa4(config-group-policy)# address-pools value ipv4-pool1 ipv4-pool2 ipv4-pool3
asa4(config-group-policy)#
Step 3 (Optional) Use the no address-pools value pool-name command to remove the address-pools from the group
policy configuration and return the address pool setting to inherit the address pool information from other
sources such as the DefltGroupPolicy.
no address-pools value pool-name1 pool-name2 pool-name6
Example:
Step 4 (Optional) The address-pools none command disables this attribute from being inherited from other sources
of policy, such as the DefltGrpPolicy.
Step 5 (Optional) The no address pools none command removes the address-pools none command from the group
policy, restoring the default value, which is to allow inheritance.
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Assign an IPv6 Address Pool to an Internal Group Policy
hostname(config-group-policy)#
Procedure
hostname> en
hostname# config t
hostname(config)# group-policy FirstGroup attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)#
Step 2 Assign the address pool named ipv6-pool to the FirstGroup group policy. You can assign up to six ipv6 address
pools to a group policy.
Example:
This example shows ipv6-pool1, ipv6-pool2, and ipv6-pool3 being assigned to the FirstGroup group policy.
Step 3 (Optional) Use the no ipv6-address-pools value pool-name command to remove the address-pools from the
group policy configuration and return the address pool setting to inherit the address pool information from
other sources such as the DfltGroupPolicy.
no ipv6-address-pools value pool-name1 pool-name2 pool-name6
Example:
Step 4 (Optional) Use the ipv6-address-pools none command to disable this attribute from being inherited
from other sources of policy, such as the DfltGrpPolicy.
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Specify the Tunneling Protocol for the Group Policy
Step 5 (Optional) Use the no ipv6-address pools none command to remove the ipv6-address-pools none command
from the group policy, restoring the default value, which is to allow inheritance.
Enter this command to configure one or more tunneling modes. You must configure at least one tunneling
mode for users to connect over a VPN tunnel.
The following example shows how to configure the IPsec IKEv1 tunneling mode for the group policy named
FirstGroup:
Specify a VLAN for Remote Access or Apply a Unified Access Control Rule to the Group Policy
Filters consist of rules that determine whether to allow or reject tunneled data packets coming through the
ASA, based on criteria such as source address, destination address, and protocol. You can specify an IPv4 or
IPv6 unified access control list for your group policy or allow it to inherit the ACLs specified in the Default
Group Policy.
Choose one of the following options to specify an egress VLAN (also called “VLAN mapping”) for remote
access or specify an ACL to filter the traffic:
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Specify a VLAN for Remote Access or Apply a Unified Access Control Rule to the Group Policy
Note When doing VLAN mapping with IPv6, the outside (destination) address must be unique for each of the
VLANs so that decrypted traffic is routed to inside networks. You cannot have the same destination network
with different VLANs and route metrics.
• Enter the following command in group-policy configuration mode to specify the egress VLAN for remote
access VPN sessions assigned to this group policy or to a group policy that inherits this group policy:
[no] vlan {vlan_id |none}
no vlan removes the vlan_id from the group policy. The group policy inherits the vlan value from the
default group policy.
none removes the vlan_id from the group policy and disables VLAN mapping for this group policy. The
group policy does not inherit the vlan value from the default group policy.
vlan_id is the number of the VLAN, in decimal format, to assign to remote access VPN sessions that use
this group policy. The VLAN must be configured on this ASA per the instructions in the “Configuring
VLAN Subinterfaces and 802.1Q Trunking” in the general operations configuration guide.
Note The egress VLAN feature works for HTTP connections, but not for FTP and
CIFS.
• Specify the name of the access control rule (ACL) to apply to VPN session, using the vpn-filter command
in group policy mode. You can specify an IPv4 or IPv6 ACL using the vpn-filter command.
Note You can also configure this attribute in username mode, in which case the value
configured under username supersedes the group-policy value.
You configure ACLs to permit or deny various types of traffic for this group policy. You then enter the
vpn-filter command to apply those ACLs.
To remove the ACL, including a null value created by entering the vpn-filter none command, enter the no
form of this command. The no option allows inheritance of a value from another group policy.
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Specify a VLAN for Remote Access or Apply a Unified Access Control Rule to the Group Policy
A group policy can inherit this value from another group policy. To prevent inheriting a value, enter the none
keyword instead of specifying an ACL name. The none keyword indicates that there is no ACL and sets a
null value, thereby disallowing an ACL.
The following example shows how to set a filter that invokes an ACL named acl_vpn for the group policy
named FirstGroup:
A vpn-filter command is applied to post-decrypted traffic after it exits a tunnel and pre-encrypted traffic
before it enters a tunnel. An ACL that is used for a vpn-filter should NOT also be used for an interface
access-group. When a vpn-filter command is applied to a group policy that governs Remote Access VPN
client connections, the ACL should be configured with the client assigned IP addresses in the src_ip position
of the ACL and the local network in the dest_ip position of the ACL.
When a vpn-filter command is applied to a group-policy that governs a LAN to LAN VPN connection, the
ACL should be configured with the remote network in the src_ip position of the ACL and the local network
in the dest_ip position of the ACL.
Caution should be used when constructing the ACLs for use with the vpn-filter feature. The ACLs are
constructed with the post-decrypted traffic in mind. However, ACLs are also applied to the traffic in the
opposite direction. For this pre-encrypted traffic that is destined for the tunnel, the ACLs are constructed with
the src_ip and dest_ip positions swapped.
In the following example, the vpn-filter is used with a Remote Access VPN client. This example assumes that
the client assigned IP address is 10.10.10.1/24 and the local network is 192.168.1.0/24.
The following ACE allows the Remote Access VPN client to telnet to the local network:
The following ACE allows the local network to telnet to the Remote Access client:
In the next example, the vpn-filter is used with a LAN to LAN VPN connection. This example assumes that
the remote network is 10.0.0.0/24 and the local network is 192.168.1.0/24. The following ACE allows remote
network to telnet to the local network:
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Specify VPN Access Hours for a Group Policy
192.168.1.0 255.255.255.0 eq 23
The following ACE allows the local network to telnet to the remote network:
Procedure
hostname> en
hostname# config t
hostname(config)# group-policy FirstGroup attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)#
Step 2 You can set the VPN access hours by associating a configured time-range policy with a group policy using
the vpn-access-hours command in group-policy configuration mode. This command assigns a VPN access
time range named business-hours to the group policy named FirstGroup.
A group policy can inherit a time-range value from a default or specified group policy. To prevent this
inheritance, enter the none keyword instead of the name of a time-range in this command. This keyword sets
VPN access hours to a null value, which allows no time-range policy.
vpn-access-hours value{time-range-name | none}
Example:
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Specify Simultaneous VPN Logins for a Group Policy
Note While the maximum limit for the number of simultaneous logins is very large, allowing several simultaneous
logins could compromise security and affect performance.
Stale AnyConnect, IPsec Client, or Clientless sessions (sessions that are terminated abnormally) might remain
in the session database, even though a “new” session has been established with the same username.
If the value of vpn-simultaneous-logins is 1, and the same user logs in again after an abnormal termination,
then the stale session is removed from the database, and the new session is established. If, however, the existing
session is still an active connection and the same user logs in again, perhaps from another PC, the first session
is logged off and removed from the database, and the new session is established.
If the number of simultaneous logins is a value greater than 1, then, when you have reached that maximum
number and try to log in again, the session with the longest idle time is logged off. If all current sessions have
been idle an equally long time, then the oldest session is logged off. This action frees up a session and allows
the new login.
The tunnel-grp-name variable specifies the name of an existing connection profile that the ASA requires for
the user to connect. Group-lock restricts users by checking if the group configured in the VPN client is the
same as the connection profile to which the user is assigned. If it is not, the ASA prevents the user from
connecting. If you do not configure group-lock, the ASA authenticates users without regard to the assigned
group. Group locking is disabled by default.
To remove the group-lock attribute from the running configuration, enter the no form of this command. This
option allows inheritance of a value from another group policy.
To disable group-lock, enter the group-lock command with the none keyword. The none keyword sets
group-lock to a null value, thereby allowing no group-lock restriction. It also prevents inheriting a group-lock
value from a default or specified group policy
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Specify the Maximum VPN Connection Time in a Group Policy
Procedure
Step 1 (Optional) Configure a maximum amount of time for VPN connections, using the vpn-session-timeout
{minutes command in group-policy configuration mode or in username configuration mode.
The minimum time is 1 minute, and the maximum time is 35791394 minutes. There is no default value. At
the end of this period of time, the ASA terminates the connection.
The following example shows how to set a VPN session timeout of 180 minutes for the group policy named
FirstGroup:
hostname(config)# group-policy FirstGroup attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# vpn-session-timeout 180
hostname(config-group-policy)#
The following example shows how to set a VPN session timeout of 180 minutes for the user named anyuser:
hostname(config)# username anyuser attributes
hostname(config-username)# vpn-session-timeout 180
hostname(config-username)#
Step 2 Configure the time at which a session timeout alert message is displayed to the user using the
vpn-session-timeout alert-interval {minutes | } command.
This alert message tells users how many minutes left until their VPN session is automatically disconnected.
The following example shows how to specify that users will be notified 20 minutes before their VPN session
is disconnected. You can specify a range of 1-30 minutes.
hostname(config-webvpn)# vpn-session-timeout alert-interval 20
Other actions using the [no] vpn-session-timeout alert-interval {minutes | none} command:
• Use the no form of the command to indicate that the VPN session timeout alert-interval attribute will be
inherited from the Default Group Policy:
hostname(config-webvpn)# no vpn-session-timeout alert-interval
• The vpn-session-timeout alert-interval none indicates that users will not receive an alert.
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Specify a VPN Session Idle Timeout for a Group Policy
Procedure
Step 1 (Optional) To configure a VPN idle timeout period use the vpn-idle-timeout minutes command in group-policy
configuration mode or in username configuration mode.
If there is no communication activity on the connection in this period, the ASA terminates the connection.
The minimum time is 1 minute, the maximum time is 35791394 minutes, and the default is 30 minutes.
The following example shows how to set a VPN idle timeout of 15 minutes for the group policy named
FirstGroup:
hostname(config)# group-policy FirstGroup attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# vpn-idle-timeout 15
hostname(config-group-policy)#
This results in AnyConnect (both SSL and IPsec/IKEv2) and Clientless VPN using the global webvpn
default-idle-timeout seconds value. This command is entered in webvpn-config mode, for example:
hostnamee(config-webvpn)# default-idle-timeout 300. The default is 1800 seconds (30 min), the
range is 60-86400 seconds.
For all webvon connections , the default-idle-timeout value is enforced only if vpn-idle-timeout none
is set in the group policy/username attribute. A non-zero idle timeout value is required by ASA for all
AnyConnect connections.
For Site-to-Site (IKEv1, IKEv2) and IKEv1 remote-access VPNs, we recommend you Disable timeout
and allow for an unlimited idle period.
• To disable the idle timeout for this group policy or user policy, enter no vpn-idle-timeout. The value
will be inherited.
• If you do not set vpn-idle-timeout at all, in anyway, the value is inherited, which defaults to 30 minutes.
Step 2 (Optional) You can optionally configure the time at which an idle timeout alert message is displayed to the
user using the vpn-idle-timeout alert-interval {minutes} command.
This alert message tells users how many minutes they have left until their VPN session is disconnected due
to inactivity. The default alert interval is one minute.
The following example shows how to set a VPN idle timeout alert interval of 3 minutes for the user named
anyuser:
hostname(config)# username anyuser attributes
hostname(config-username)# vpn-idle-timeout alert-interval 3
hostname(config-username)#
Other actions using the [no] vpn-idle-timeout alert-interval {minutes | none} command:
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Configure WINS and DNS Servers for a Group Policy
• The none parameter indicates that users will not receive an alert.
hostname(config)# username anyuser attributes
hostname(config-username)# vpn-idle-timeout none
hostname(config-username)#
• To remove the alert interval for this group or user policy enter no vpn-idle-timeout alert-interval. The
value will be inherited.
• If you do not set this parameter at all, the default alert interval is one minute.
Procedure
The first IP address specified is that of the primary WINS server. The second (optional) IP address is that of
the secondary WINS server. Specifying the none keyword instead of an IP address sets WINS servers to a
null value, which allows no WINS servers and prevents inheriting a value from a default or specified group
policy.
Every time that you enter the wins-server command, you overwrite the existing setting. For example, if you
configure WINS server x.x.x.x and then configure WINS server y.y.y.y, the second command overwrites the
first, and y.y.y.y becomes the sole WINS server. The same is true for multiple servers. To add a WINS server
rather than overwrite previously configured servers, include the IP addresses of all WINS servers when you
enter this command.
The following example shows how to configure WINS servers with the IP addresses 10.10.10.15 and
10.10.10.30 for the group policy named FirstGroup:
The first IP address specified is that of the primary DNS server. The second (optional) IP address is that of
the secondary DNS server. Specifying the none keyword instead of an IP address sets DNS servers to a null
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Set the Split-Tunneling Policy
value, which allows no DNS servers and prevents inheriting a value from a default or specified group policy.
You can specify up to four DNS server addresses: up to two IPv4 addresses and two IPv6 addresses.
Every time that you enter the dns-server command, you overwrite the existing setting. For example, if you
configure DNS server x.x.x.x and then configure DNS server y.y.y.y, the second command overwrites the
first, and y.y.y.y becomes the sole DNS server. The same is true for multiple servers. To add a DNS server
rather than overwrite previously configured servers, include the IP addresses of all DNS servers when you
enter this command.
The following example shows how to configure DNS servers with the IP addresses 10.10.10.15, 10.10.10.30,
2001:DB8::1, and 2001:DB8::2 for the group policy named FirstGroup:
Step 3 If there is no default domain name specified in the DefaultDNS DNS server group, you must specify a default
domain. Use the domain name and top level domain for example, example.com.
DHCP scope specifies the range of IP addresses (that is, a subnetwork) that the ASA DHCP server should
use to assign addresses to users of this group policy.
The following example shows how to set an IP subnetwork of 10.10.85.0 (specifying the address range of
10.10.85.0 through 10.10.85.255) for the group policy named First Group:
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Specify a Network List for Split-Tunneling
• excludespecified — Does not tunnel traffic to or from the networks specified in the Network List. Traffic
from or to all other addresses is tunneled. The VPN client profile that is active on the client must have
Local LAN Access enabled.
Note Networks in the exclusion list that are not a subset of the include list are ignored
by the client.
• tunnelall —Specifies that all traffic goes through the tunnel. This policy disables split tunneling. Remote
users have access to the corporate network, but they do not have access to local networks. This is the
default option.
Note Split tunneling is a traffic management feature, not a security feature. For optimum security, we recommend
that you do not enable split tunneling.
Example
The following examples shows how to set a split tunneling policy of tunneling only specified networks
for the group policy named FirstGroup for IPv4 and IPv6:
• value access-list name — identifies an ACL that enumerates the networks to tunnel or not tunnel. The
ACL can be a unified ACL with ACEs that specify both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
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Configure Domain Attributes for Split Tunneling
• none — indicates that there is no network list for split tunneling; the ASA tunnels all traffic. Specifying
the none keyword sets a split tunneling network list with a null value, thereby disallowing split tunneling.
It also prevents inheriting a default split tunneling network list from a default or specified group policy.
To delete a network list, enter the no form of this command. To delete all split tunneling network lists, enter
the no split-tunnel-network-list command without arguments. This command deletes all configured network
lists, including a null list if you created one by entering the none keyword.
When there are no split tunneling network lists, users inherit any network lists that exist in the default or
specified group policy. To prevent users from inheriting such network lists, enter the split-tunnel-network-list
none command.
Example
The following example shows how to create a network list named FirstList, and add it to the group policy
named FirstGroup. FistList is an exclusion list and an inclusion list that is a subnet of the exclusion list:
The following example shows how to create a network list named v6, and add the v6 split tunnel policy to
the group policy named GroupPolicy_ipv6-ikev2. v6 is an exclusion list and an inclusion list that is a subnet
of the exclusion list:
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Define a Default Domain Name
AnyConnect 3.1 supports true split DNS functionality for Windows and Mac OS X platforms. If the group
policy on the security appliance enables split-include tunneling, and if it specifies the DNS names to be
tunneled, AnyConnect tunnels any DNS queries that match those names to the private DNS server. True split
DNS allows tunnel access to only DNS requests that match the domains pushed to the client by the ASA.
These requests are not sent in the clear. On the other hand, if the DNS requests do not match the domains
pushed down by the ASA, AnyConnect lets the DNS resolver on the client operating system submit the host
name in the clear for DNS resolution.
Note Split DNS supports standard and update queries (including A, AAAA, NS, TXT, MX, SOA, ANY, SRV,
PTR, and CNAME). PTR queries matching any of the tunneled networks are allowed through the tunnel.
For Mac OS X, AnyConnect can use true split-DNS for a certain IP protocol only if one of the following
conditions is met:
• Split-DNS is configured for one IP protocol (such as IPv4), and Client Bypass Protocol is configured
for the other IP protocol (such as IPv6) in the group policy (with no address pool configured for the latter
IP protocol).
• Split-DNS is configured for both IP protocols.
The value domain-name parameter identifies the default domain name for the group. To specify that there is
no default domain name, enter the none keyword. This command sets a default domain name with a null
value, which disallows a default domain name and prevents inheriting a default domain name from a default
or specified group policy.
To delete all default domain names, enter the no default-domain command without arguments. This command
deletes all configured default domain names, including a null list if you created one by entering the
default-domain command with the none keyword. The no form allows inheriting a domain name.
The following example shows how to set a default domain name of FirstDomain for the group policy named
FirstGroup:
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When there are no split tunneling domain lists, users inherit any that exist in the default group policy. To
prevent users from inheriting such split tunneling domain lists, enter the split-dns command with the none
keyword.
To delete all split tunneling domain lists, enter the no split-dns command without arguments. This deletes
all configured split tunneling domain lists, including a null list created by issuing the split-dns command with
the none keyword.
The parameter value domain-name provides a domain name that the ASA resolves through the split tunnel.
The none keyword indicates that there is no split DNS list. It also sets a split DNS list with a null value,
thereby disallowing a split DNS list, and prevents inheriting a split DNS list from a default or specified group
policy. The syntax of the command is as follows:
Enter a single space to separate each entry in the list of domains. There is no limit on the number of entries,
but the entire string can be no longer than 255 characters. You can use only alphanumeric characters, hyphens
(-), and periods (.). If the default domain name is to be resolved through the tunnel, you must explicitly include
that name in this list.
The following example shows how to configure the domains Domain1, Domain2, Domain3, and Domain4
to be resolved through split tunneling for the group policy named FirstGroup:
Note When configuring split DNS, ensure the private DNS servers specified do not overlap with the DNS servers
configured for the client platform. If they do, name resolution does not function properly and queries may be
dropped.
The netmask variable provides the subnet mask for the tunnel IP address. The no form of this command
removes the DHCP intercept from the configuration:
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Configure Browser Proxy Settings for use with Remote Access Clients
[no] intercept-dhcp
The following example shows how to set DHCP Intercepts for the group policy named FirstGroup:
Configure Browser Proxy Settings for use with Remote Access Clients
Follow these steps to configure the proxy server parameters for a client.
Procedure
Step 1 Configure a browser proxy server and port for a client device by entering the msie-proxy server command
in group-policy configuration mode:
The default value is none, which is not specifying any proxy server settings on the browser of the client device.
To remove the attribute from the configuration, use the no form of the command.
The line containing the proxy server IP address or hostname and the port number must be less than 100
characters long.
The following example shows how to configure the IP address 192.168.10.1 as a browser proxy server, using
port 880, for the group policy named FirstGroup:
Step 2 Configure the browser proxy actions (“methods”) for a client device by entering the msie-proxy method
command in group-policy configuration mode.
The default value is no-modify. To remove the attribute from the configuration, use the no form of the
command.
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hostname(config-group-policy)#
The line containing the proxy server IP address or hostname and the port number must be less than 100
characters long.
The following example shows how to configure auto-detect as the browser proxy setting for the group policy
named FirstGroup:
The following example configures the browser proxy setting for the group policy named FirstGroup to use
the server QAserver, port 1001 as the server for the client device:
Step 3 Configure browser proxy exception list settings for a local bypass on the client device by entering the
msie-proxy except-list command in group-policy configuration mode. These addresses are not accessed by
a proxy server. This list corresponds to the Exceptions box in the Proxy Settings dialog box.
To remove the attribute from the configuration, use the no form of the command:
• value server:port—Specifies the IP address or name of an MSIE server and port that is applied for this
client device. The port number is optional.
• none—Indicates that there is no IP address/hostname or port and prevents inheriting an exception list.
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Configure Security Attributes for IPsec (IKEv1) Clients
The line containing the proxy server IP address or hostname and the port number must be less than 100
characters long.
The following example shows how to set a browser proxy exception list, consisting of the server at IP address
192.168.20.1, using port 880, for the group policy named FirstGroup:
Step 4 Enable or disable browser proxy local-bypass settings for a client device by entering the msie-proxy
local-bypass command in group-policy configuration mode.
To remove the attribute from the configuration, use the no form of the command.
Procedure
Step 1 Specify whether to let users store their login passwords on the client system, using the password-storage
command with the enable keyword in group-policy configuration mode. To disable password storage, use
the password-storage command with the disable keyword.
For security reasons, password storage is disabled by default. Enable password storage only on systems that
you know to be in secure sites.
To remove the password-storage attribute from the running configuration, enter the no form of this command:
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hostname(config-group-policy)# no password-storage
hostname(config-group-policy)#
Specifying the no form enables inheritance of a value for password-storage from another group policy.
This command does not apply to interactive hardware client authentication or individual user authentication
for hardware clients.
The following example shows how to enable password storage for the group policy named FirstGroup:
To enable LZS IP compression, enter the ip-comp command with the enable keyword in group-policy
configuration mode. To disable IP compression, enter the ip-comp command with the disable keyword.
To remove the ip-comp attribute from the running configuration, enter the no form of this command. This
enables inheritance of a value from another group policy.
hostname(config-group-policy)# no ip-comp
hostname(config-group-policy)#
Enabling data compression might speed up data transmission rates for remote dial-in users connecting with
modems.
Tip Data compression increases the memory requirement and CPU usage for each user session and
consequently decreases the overall throughput of the ASA. For this reason, we recommend that you
enable data compression only for remote users connecting with a modem. Design a group policy
specific to modem users, and enable compression only for them.
Step 3 Specify whether to require that users reauthenticate on IKE re-key by using the re-xauth command with the
enable keyword in group-policy configuration mode.
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To enable inheritance of a value for reauthentication on IKE re-key from another group policy, remove the
re-xauth attribute from the running configuration by entering the no form of this command:
hostname(config-group-policy)# no re-xauth
hostname(config-group-policy)#
Note Reauthentication fails if there is no user at the other end of the connection.
Step 4 Specify whether to enable perfect forward secrecy. In IPsec negotiations, perfect forward secrecy ensures that
each new cryptographic key is unrelated to any previous key. A group policy can inherit a value for perfect
forward secrecy from another group policy. Perfect forward secrecy is disabled by default. To enable perfect
forward secrecy, use the pfs command with the enable keyword in group-policy configuration mode.
To disable perfect forward secrecy, enter the pfs command with the disable keyword.
To remove the perfect forward secrecy attribute from the running configuration and prevent inheriting a value,
enter the no form of this command.
hostname(config-group-policy)# no pfs
hostname(config-group-policy)#
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To enable IPsec over UDP, configure the ipsec-udp command with the enable keyword in group-policy
configuration mode, as follows:
To use IPsec over UDP, you must also configure the ipsec-udp-port command, as described in this section.
To disable IPsec over UDP, enter the disable keyword. To remove the IPsec over UDP attribute from the
running configuration, enter the no form of this command. This enables inheritance of a value for IPsec over
UDP from another group policy.
The following example shows how to set IPsec over UDP for the group policy named FirstGroup:
If you enabled IPsec over UDP, you must also configure the ipsec-udp-port command in group-policy
configuration mode. This command sets a UDP port number for IPsec over UDP. In IPsec negotiations, the
ASA listens on the configured port and forwards UDP traffic for that port even if other filter rules drop UDP
traffic. The port numbers can range from 4001 through 49151. The default port value is 10000.
To disable the UDP port, enter the no form of this command. This enables inheritance of a value for the IPsec
over UDP port from another group policy.
The following example shows how to set an IPsec UDP port to port 4025 for the group policy named FirstGroup:
Step 1 (Optional) Configure Network Extension Mode with the following command:
[no] nem [enable | disable]
Network extension mode lets hardware clients present a single, routable network to the remote private network
over the VPN tunnel. PAT does not apply. Therefore, devices behind the Easy VPN Server have direct access
to devices on the private network behind the Easy VPN Remote over the tunnel, and only over the tunnel,
and vice versa. The hardware client must initiate the tunnel, but after the tunnel is up, either side can initiate
data exchange.
Example:
The following example shows how to set NEM for the group policy named FirstGroup:
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To disable NEM, enter the disable keyword. To remove the NEM attribute from the running configuration,
enter the no form of this command. This option allows inheritance of a value from another group policy.
Step 2 (Optional) Configure Secure Unit Authentication with the following command:
[no] secure-unit-authentication [enable | disable ]
Secure unit authentication provides additional security by requiring VPN hardware clients to authenticate
with a username and password each time that the client initiates a tunnel. With this feature enabled, the
hardware client does not a use the saved username and password if configured. Secure unit authentication is
disabled by default.
Secure unit authentication requires that you have an authentication server group configured for the connection
profile the hardware client(s) uses. If you require secure unit authentication on the primary ASA, be sure to
configure it on any backup servers as well.
Note With this feature enabled, to bring up a VPN tunnel, a user must be present to enter the username
and password.
Example:
The following example shows how to enable secure unit authentication for the group policy named FirstGroup:
hostname(config)#group-policy FirstGroup attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# secure-unit-authentication enable
To disable secure unit authentication, enter the disable keyword. To remove the secure unit authentication
attribute from the running configuration, enter the no form of this command. This option allows inheritance
of a value for secure unit authentication from another group policy.
To disable user authentication, enter the disable keyword. To remove the user authentication attribute from
the running configuration, enter the no form of this command. This option allows inheritance of a value for
user authentication from another group policy.
Step 4 Set an idle timeout for individual users that have authenticated with the following command:
[no] user-authentication-idle-timeout minutes | none ]
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The minutes parameter specifies the number of minutes in the idle timeout period. The minimum is 1 minute,
the default is 30 minutes, and the maximum is 35791394 minutes.
If there is no communication activity by a user behind a hardware client in the idle timeout period, the ASA
terminates the client’s access. This timer terminates only the client’s access through the VPN tunnel, not the
VPN tunnel itself.
Example:
The following example shows how to set an idle timeout value of 45 minutes for the group policy named
FirstGroup:
hostname(config)# group-policy FirstGroup attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# user-authentication enable
hostname(config-group-policy)#user-authentication-idle-timeout 45
To delete the idle timeout value, enter the no form of this command. This option allows inheritance of an idle
timeout value from another group policy. To prevent inheriting an idle timeout value, enter the
user-authentication-idle-timeout command with the none keyword. This command sets the idle timeout
with a null value, which disallows an idle timeout and prevents inheriting a user authentication idle timeout
value from a default or specified group policy.
Note The idle timeout indicated in response to the show uauth command is always the idle timeout value
of the user who authenticated the tunnel on the Cisco Easy VPN remote device.
To disable IP Phone Bypass, enter the disable keyword. To remove the IP phone Bypass attribute from the
running configuration, enter the no form of this command. This option allows inheritance of a value for IP
Phone Bypass from another group policy.
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Configure Group Policy Attributes for AnyConnect Secure Mobility Client Connections
Example:
The following example shows how to set LEAP Bypass for the group policy named FirstGroup:
hostname(config)# group-policy FirstGroup attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# user-authentication enable
hostname(config-group-policy)# leap-bypass enable
To disable LEAP Bypass, enter the disable keyword. To remove the LEAP Bypass attribute from the running
configuration, enter the no form of this command. This option allows inheritance of a value for LEAP Bypass
from another group policy:
Procedure
Step 2 To disable the permanent installation of the AnyConnect client on the endpoint computer, use the anyconnect
keep-installer command with the none keyword. For example:
The default is that permanent installation of the client is enabled. The client remains installed on the endpoint
at the end of the AnyConnect session.
Step 3 To enable compression of HTTP data over an AnyConnect SSL connection for the group policy, enter the
anyconnect ssl compression command. By default, compression is set to none (disabled). To enable
compression, use the deflate keyword. For example:
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Step 6 To enable the AnyConnect client to perform a re-key on an SSL session, use the anyconnect ssl rekey command:
anyconnect ssl rekey {method {ssl | new-tunnel} | time minutes | none}}
By default, re-key is disabled.
Specifying the method as new-tunnel specifies that the AnyConnect client establishes a new tunnel during
SSL re-key. Specifying the method as none disables re-key. Specifying the method as ssl specifies that SSL
renegotiation takes place during re-key. Instead of specifying the method, you can specify the time; that is,
the number of minutes from the start of the session until the re-key takes place, from 1 through 10080 (1
week).
The following example configures the AnyConnect client to renegotiate with SSL during re-key and configures
the re-key to occur 30 minutes after the session begins:
Step 7 The Client Protocol Bypass feature allows you to configure how the AnyConnect client manages IPv4 traffic
when ASA is expecting only IPv6 traffic or how it manages IPv6 traffic when it is expecting only IPv4 traffic.
When the AnyConnect client makes a VPN connection to the ASA, the ASA could assign it an IPv4, IPv6,
or both an IPv4 and IPv6 address. If the ASA assigns the AnyConnect connection only an IPv4 address or
only an IPv6 address, you can now configure the Client Bypass Protocol to drop network traffic for which
the ASA did not assign an IP address, or allow that traffic to bypass the ASA and be sent from the client
unencrypted or “in the clear.”
For example, assume that the ASA assigns only an IPv4 address to an AnyConnect connection and the endpoint
is dual stacked. When the endpoint attempts to reach an IPv6 address, if Client Bypass Protocol is disabled,
the IPv6 traffic is dropped; however, if Client Bypass Protocol is enabled, the IPv6 traffic is sent from the
client in the clear.
If establishing an IPsec tunnel (as opposed to an SSL connection), the ASA is not notified whether or not
IPv6 is enabled on the client, so ASA always pushes down the client bypass protocol setting.
Use the client-bypass-protocol command to enable or disable the client bypass protocol feature. This is the
command syntax:
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The following example removes an enabled or disabled client bypass protocol setting:
Step 8 If you have configured Load Balancing between your ASAs, specify the FQDN of the ASA in order to resolve
the ASA IP address used for re-establishing the VPN session. This setting is critical to support client roaming
between networks of different IP protocols (such as IPv4 to IPv6).
You cannot use the ASA FQDN present in the AnyConnect profile to derive the ASA IP address after roaming.
The addresses may not match the correct device (the one the tunnel was established to) in the load balancing
scenario.
If the device FQDN is not pushed to the client, the client will try to reconnect to whatever IP address the
tunnel had previously established. In order to support roaming between networks of different IP protocols
(from IPv4 to IPv6), AnyConnect must perform name resolution of the device FQDN after roaming, so that
it can determine which ASA address to use for re-establishing the tunnel. The client uses the ASA FQDN
present in its profile during the initial connection. During subsequent session reconnects, it always uses the
device FQDN pushed by ASA (and configured by the administrator in the group policy), when available. If
the FQDN is not configured, the ASA derives the device FQDN (and sends it to the client) from whatever is
set under Device Setup > Device Name/Password and Domain Name.
If the device FQDN is not pushed by the ASA, the client cannot re-establish the VPN session after roaming
between networks of different IP protocols.
Use the gateway-fqdn command to configure the FQDN of the ASA. This is the command syntax:
gateway-fqdn { value FQDN_Name | none} or no gateway-fqdn
The following example defines the FQDN of the ASA as ASAName.example.cisco.com
The following example removes the FQDN of the ASA from the group policy. The group policy then inherits
this value from the Default Group Policy.
hostname(config-group-policy)# no gateway-fqdn
hostname(config-group-policy)#
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The following example defines the FQDN as an empty value. The global FQDN configured using hostname
and domain-name commands will be used if available.
Note If you are using hostnames, it is wise to have backup DNS and WINS servers on a separate network from that
of the primary DNS and WINS servers. Otherwise, if clients behind a hardware client obtain DNS and WINS
information from the hardware client via DHCP, and the connection to the primary server is lost, and the
backup servers have different DNS and WINS information, clients cannot be updated until the DHCP lease
expires. In addition, if you use hostnames and the DNS server is unavailable, significant delays can occur.
To configure backup servers, enter the backup-servers command in group-policy configuration mode:
To remove a backup server, enter the no form of this command with the backup server specified. To remove
the backup-servers attribute from the running configuration and enable inheritance of a value for backup-servers
from another group policy, enter the no form of this command without arguments.
The clear-client-config keyword specifies that the client uses no backup servers. The ASA pushes a null
server list.
The keep-client-config keyword specifies that the ASA sends no backup server information to the client. The
client uses its own backup server list, if configured. This is the default.
The server1 server 2.... server10 parameter list is a space-delimited, priority-ordered list of servers for the
VPN client to use when the primary ASA is unavailable. This list identifies servers by IP address or hostname.
The list can be 500 characters long, and it can contain up to10 entries.
The following example shows how to configure backup servers with IP addresses 10.10.10.1 and 192.168.10.14,
for the group policy named FirstGroup:
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Configure Network Admission Control Parameters
Procedure
Step 1 (Optional) Configure the status query timer period. The security appliance starts the status query timer after
each successful posture validation and status query response. The expiration of this timer triggers a query for
changes in the host posture, referred to as a status query. Enter the number of seconds in the range 30 through
1800. The default setting is 300.
To specify the interval between each successful posture validation in a Network Admission Control session
and the next query for changes in the host posture, use the nac-sq-period command in group-policy
configuration mode:
To inherit the value of the status query timer from the default group policy, access the alternative group policy
from which to inherit it, then use the no form of this command:
The following example changes the value of the status query timer to 1800 seconds:
The following example inherits the value of the status query timer from the default group policy:
hostname(config-group-policy)# no nac-sq-period
hostname(config-group-policy)#
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Step 2 (Optional) Configure the NAC revalidation period. The security appliance starts the revalidation timer after
each successful posture validation. The expiration of this timer triggers the next unconditional posture validation.
The security appliance maintains posture validation during revalidation. The default group policy becomes
effective if the Access Control Server is unavailable during posture validation or revalidation. Enter the interval
in seconds between each successful posture validation. The range is 300 through 86400. The default setting
is 36000.
To specify the interval between each successful posture validation in a Network Admission Control session,
use the nac-reval-period command in group-policy configuration mode:
To inherit the value of the Revalidation Timer from the default group policy, access the alternative group
policy from which to inherit it, then use the no form of this command:
The following example inherits the value of the revalidation timer from the default group policy:
hostname(config-group-policy)# no nac-reval-period
hostname(config-group-policy)#
Step 3 (Optional) Configure the default ACL for NAC. The security appliance applies the security policy associated
with the selected ACL if posture validation fails. Specify none or an extended ACL. The default setting is
none. If the setting is none and posture validation fails, the security appliance applies the default group policy.
To specify the ACL to be used as the default ACL for Network Admission Control sessions that fail posture
validation, use the nac-default-acl command in group-policy configuration mode:
To inherit the ACL from the default group policy, access the alternative group policy from which to inherit
it, then use the no form of this command:
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• none—Disables inheritance of the ACL from the default group policy and does not apply an ACL to
NAC sessions that fail posture validation.
Because NAC is disabled by default, VPN traffic traversing the ASA is not subject to the NAC Default ACL
until NAC is enabled.
The following example identifies acl-1 as the ACL to be applied when posture validation fails:
The following example inherits the ACL from the default group policy:
hostname(config-group-policy)# no nac-default-acl
hostname(config-group-policy)#
The following example disables inheritance of the ACL from the default group policy and does not apply an
ACL to NAC sessions that fail posture validation:
Step 4 Configure NAC exemptions for VPN. By default, the exemption list is empty.The default value of the filter
attribute is none. Enter the vpn-nac-exempt command once for each operating system (and ACL) to be
matched to exempt remote hosts from posture validation.
To add an entry to the list of remote computer types that are exempt from posture validation, use the
vpn-nac-exempt command in group-policy configuration mode:
To disable inheritance and specify that all hosts are subject to posture validation, use the none keyword
immediately following vpn-nac-exempt:
To remove an entry from the exemption list, use the no form of this command and name the operating system
(and ACL) in the entry to be removed:
To remove all entries from the exemption list associated with this group policy and inherit the list from the
default group policy, use the no form of this command without specifying additional keywords:
hostname(config-group-policy)# no vpn-nac-exempt
hostname(config-group-policy)#
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The following example disables inheritance and specifies that all hosts will be subject to posture validation:
The following example removes all entries from the exemption list:
hostname(config-group-policy)# no vpn-nac-exempt
hostname(config-group-policy)
Step 5 Enable or disable Network Admission Control by entering the following command:
To inherit the NAC setting from the default group policy, access the alternative group policy from which to
inherit it, then use the no form of this command:
By default, NAC is disabled. Enabling NAC requires posture validation for remote access. If the remote
computer passes the validation checks, the ACS server downloads the access policy for the ASA to enforce.
NAC is disabled by default.
An Access Control Server must be present on the network.
The following example enables NAC for the group policy:
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Configure VPN Client Firewall Policies
Note Only VPN clients running Microsoft Windows can use these firewall features. They are currently not available
to hardware clients or other (non-Windows) software clients.
In the first scenario, a remote user has a personal firewall installed on the PC. The VPN client enforces firewall
policy defined on the local firewall, and it monitors that firewall to make sure it is running. If the firewall
stops running, the VPN client drops the connection to the ASA. (This firewall enforcement mechanism is
called Are You There (AYT), because the VPN client monitors the firewall by sending it periodic “are you
there?” messages; if no reply comes, the VPN client knows the firewall is down and terminates its connection
to the ASA.) The network administrator might configure these PC firewalls originally, but with this approach,
each user can customize his or her own configuration.
In the second scenario, you might prefer to enforce a centralized firewall policy for personal firewalls on VPN
client PCs. A common example would be to block Internet traffic to remote PCs in a group using split tunneling.
This approach protects the PCs, and therefore the central site, from intrusions from the Internet while tunnels
are established. This firewall scenario is called push policy or Central Protection Policy (CPP). On the ASA,
you create a set of traffic management rules to enforce on the VPN client, associate those rules with a filter,
and designate that filter as the firewall policy. The ASA pushes this policy down to the VPN client. The VPN
client then in turn passes the policy to the local firewall, which enforces it.
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Procedure
Step 2 Specify an access control rule for the private or public network rule. The private network rule is the rule
applied to the VPN virtual adapter interface on the client.
anyconnect firewall-rule client-interface {private | public} value [RuleName]
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# anyconnect firewall-rule client-interface private value
ClientFWRule
Step 3 Display the group policy attributes as well as the webvpn policy attribute for the group policy.
show runn group-policy [value]
Example:
Step 4 Remove the client firewall rule from the private network rule.
no anyconnect firewall-rule client-interface private value [RuleName]
Example:
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1. The VPN client software (residing on the same remote PC as the Integrity client software) connects to
the ASA and tells the ASA what type of firewall client it is.
2. After the ASA approves the client firewall type, the ASA passes Integrity server address information back
to the Integrity client.
3. With the ASA acting as a proxy, the Integrity client establishes a restricted connection with the Integrity
server. A restricted connection is only between the Integrity client and the Integrity server.
4. The Integrity server determines if the Integrity client is in compliance with the mandated security policies.
If the Integrity client is in compliance with security policies, the Integrity server instructs the ASA to open
the connection and provide the Integrity client with connection details.
5. On the remote PC, the VPN client passes connection details to the Integrity client and signals that policy
enforcement should begin immediately and the Integrity client can enter the private network.
6. After the VPN connection is established, the Integrity server continues to monitor the state of the Integrity
client using client heartbeat messages.
Note The current release of the ASA supports one Integrity server at a time, even though the user interfaces support
the configuration of up to five Integrity servers. If the active Integrity server fails, configure another one on
the ASA and then reestablish the VPN client session.
Procedure
Example:
hostname(config)# zonelabs-Integrity server-address 10.0.0.5
Example:
hostname(config)# zonelabs-integrity port 300
Step 3 Specify the inside interface for communications with the Integrity server.
zonelabs-integrity interface interface
Example:
hostname(config)# zonelabs-integrity interface inside
Step 4 Ensure that the ASA waits 12 seconds for a response from either the active or standby Integrity servers before
declaring the Integrity server as failed and closing the VPN client connections.
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Set the Firewall Client Type to Zone Labs
Note If the connection between the ASA and the Integrity server fails, the VPN client connections remain
open by default so that the enterprise VPN is not disrupted by the failure of an Integrity server.
However, you may want to close the VPN connections if the Zone Labs Integrity server fails.
Example:
hostname(config)# zonelabs-integrity fail-timeout 12
Step 5 Configure the ASA so that connections to VPN clients close when the connection between the ASA and the
Zone Labs Integrity server fails.
zonelabs-integrity fail-close
Example:
hostname(config)# zonelabs-integrity fail-close
Step 6 Return the configured VPN client connection fail state to the default and ensure that the client connections
remain open.
zonelabs-integrity fail-open
Example:
hostname(config)# zonelabs-integrity fail-open
Step 7 Specify that the Integrity server connects to port 300 (the default is port 80) on the ASA to request the server
SSL certificate.
zonelabs-integrity ssl-certificate-port cert-port-number
Example:
hostname(config)# zonelabs-integrity ssl-certificate-port 300
Step 8 While the server SSL certificate is always authenticated, specify that the client SSL certificate of the Integrity
server be authenticated.
Example:
hostname(config)# zonelabs-integrity ssl-client-authentication enable
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Set the Client Firewall Parameters
What to do next
For more information, see Configure VPN Client Firewall Policies, on page 154. The command arguments
that specify firewall policies are not used when the firewall type is zonelabs-integrity, because the Integrity
server determines these policies.
• No Firewall
Note When the firewall type is zonelabs-integrity, do not include arguments. The
Zone Labs Integrity Server determines the policies.
client-firewall
hostname(config-group-policy)# {opt | req}
zonelabs-zonealarmorpro policy {AYT | CPP acl-in ACL acl-out ACL}
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Set the Client Firewall Parameters
Parameter Description
acl-in ACL Provides the policy the client uses for inbound traffic.
acl-out ACL Provides the policy the client uses for outbound traffic.
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Configure Client Access Rules
zonelabs-zonealarmorpro policy Specifies Zone Labs Zone Alarm or Pro firewall type.
zonelabs-zonealarmpro policy Specifies Zone Labs Zone Alarm Pro firewall type.
The following example shows how to set a client firewall policy that requires Cisco Intrusion Prevention
Security Agent for the group policy named FirstGroup:
To delete a rule, enter the no form of this command. This command is equivalent to the following command:
To delete all rules, enter the no client-access-rule command without arguments. This deletes all configured
rules, including a null rule if you created one by issuing the client-access-rule command with the none
keyword.
By default, there are no access rules. When there are no client access rules, users inherit any rules that exist
in the default group policy.
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Configure Client Access Rules
To prevent users from inheriting client access rules, enter the client-access-rule command with the none
keyword. The result of this command is that all client types and versions can connect.
The table below explains the meaning of the keywords and parameters in these commands.
Parameter Description
priority Determines the priority of the rule. The rule with the
lowest integer has the highest priority. Therefore, the
rule with the lowest integer that matches a client type
and/or version is the rule that applies. If a lower
priority rule contradicts, the ASA ignores it.
type type Identifies device types via free-form strings. The string
must match exactly its appearance in the show
vpn-sessiondb remote display, except that you can
enter the * character as a wildcard.
version version Identifies the device version via free-form strings, for
example 7.0. A string must match exactly its
appearance in the show vpn-sessiondb remote
display, except that you can enter the * character as
a wildcard.
The following example shows how to create client access rules for the group policy named FirstGroup. These
rules permit Cisco VPN clients running software version 4.x, while denying all Windows NT clients:
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Configure User Attributes
Note The “type” field is a free-form string that allows any value, but that value must match the fixed value that the
client sends to the ASA at connect time.
This displays the encrypted password and the privilege level, for all users, or, if you supply a username, for
that specific user. If you omit the all keyword, only explicitly configured values appear in this list. The
following example displays the output of this command for the user named testuser:
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Configure User Attributes
The optional privilege keyword lets you set a privilege level for this user. Privilege levels range from 0 (the
lowest) through 15. System administrators generally have the highest privilege level. The default level is 2.
The table below describes the meaning of the keywords and variables used in this command.
username Command Keywords and Variables
Keyword/Variable Meaning
password password Indicates that this user has a password, and provides
the password.
privilege priv_level Sets a privilege level for this user. The range is from
0 to 15, with lower numbers having less ability to use
commands and administer the ASA. The default
privilege level is 2. The typical privilege level for a
system administrator is 15.
By default, VPN users that you add with this command have no attributes or group policy association. You
must explicitly configure all values.
The following example shows how to configure a user named anyuser with an encrypted password of
pw_12345678 and a privilege level of 12:
The prompt changes to indicate the new mode. You can now configure the attributes.
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Configure VPN User Attributes
Configure Inheritance
You can let users inherit from the group policy the values of attributes that you have not configured at the
username level. To specify the name of the group policy from which this user inherits attributes, enter the
vpn-group-policy command. By default, VPN users have no group-policy association:
For an attribute that is available in username mode, you can override the value of an attribute in a group policy
for a particular user by configuring it in username mode.
The following example shows how to configure a user named anyuser to use attributes from the group policy
named FirstGroup:
The following example shows how to associate the user named anyuser with a time-range policy called 824:
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Configure the Idle Timeout
Note While the maximum limit for the number of simultaneous logins is very large, allowing several could
compromise security and affect performance.
The following example shows how to allow a maximum of 4 simultaneous logins for the user named anyuser:
Procedure
Step 1 (Optional) To configure a VPN idle timeout period use the vpn-idle-timeout minutes command in group-policy
configuration mode or in username configuration mode.
If there is no communication activity on the connection in this period, the ASA terminates the connection.
The minimum time is 1 minute, the maximum time is 35791394 minutes, and the default is 30 minutes.
The following example shows how to set a VPN idle timeout of 15 minutes for the group policy named
FirstGroup:
hostname(config)# group-policy FirstGroup attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# vpn-idle-timeout 15
hostname(config-group-policy)#
This results in AnyConnect (both SSL and IPsec/IKEv2) and Clientless VPN using the global webvpn
default-idle-timeout seconds value. This command is entered in webvpn-config mode, for example:
hostnamee(config-webvpn)# default-idle-timeout 300. The default is 1800 seconds (30 min), the
range is 60-86400 seconds.
For all webvon connections , the default-idle-timeout value is enforced only if vpn-idle-timeout none
is set in the group policy/username attribute. A non-zero idle timeout value is required by ASA for all
AnyConnect connections.
For Site-to-Site (IKEv1, IKEv2) and IKEv1 remote-access VPNs, we recommend you Disable timeout
and allow for an unlimited idle period.
• To disable the idle timeout for this group policy or user policy, enter no vpn-idle-timeout. The value
will be inherited.
• If you do not set vpn-idle-timeout at all, in anyway, the value is inherited, which defaults to 30 minutes.
Step 2 (Optional) You can optionally configure the time at which an idle timeout alert message is displayed to the
user using the vpn-idle-timeout alert-interval {minutes} command.
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Configure the Maximum Connect Time
This alert message tells users how many minutes they have left until their VPN session is disconnected due
to inactivity. The default alert interval is one minute.
The following example shows how to set a VPN idle timeout alert interval of 3 minutes for the user named
anyuser:
hostname(config)# username anyuser attributes
hostname(config-username)# vpn-idle-timeout alert-interval 3
hostname(config-username)#
Other actions using the [no] vpn-idle-timeout alert-interval {minutes | none} command:
• The none parameter indicates that users will not receive an alert.
hostname(config)# username anyuser attributes
hostname(config-username)# vpn-idle-timeout none
hostname(config-username)#
• To remove the alert interval for this group or user policy enter no vpn-idle-timeout alert-interval. The
value will be inherited.
• If you do not set this parameter at all, the default alert interval is one minute.
Procedure
Step 1 (Optional) Configure a maximum amount of time for VPN connections, using the vpn-session-timeout
{minutes command in group-policy configuration mode or in username configuration mode.
The minimum time is 1 minute, and the maximum time is 35791394 minutes. There is no default value. At
the end of this period of time, the ASA terminates the connection.
The following example shows how to set a VPN session timeout of 180 minutes for the group policy named
FirstGroup:
hostname(config)# group-policy FirstGroup attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# vpn-session-timeout 180
hostname(config-group-policy)#
The following example shows how to set a VPN session timeout of 180 minutes for the user named anyuser:
hostname(config)# username anyuser attributes
hostname(config-username)# vpn-session-timeout 180
hostname(config-username)#
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Apply an ACL Filter
Step 2 Configure the time at which a session timeout alert message is displayed to the user using the
vpn-session-timeout alert-interval {minutes | } command.
This alert message tells users how many minutes left until their VPN session is automatically disconnected.
The following example shows how to specify that users will be notified 20 minutes before their VPN session
is disconnected. You can specify a range of 1-30 minutes.
hostname(config-webvpn)# vpn-session-timeout alert-interval 20
Other actions using the [no] vpn-session-timeout alert-interval {minutes | none} command:
• Use the no form of the command to indicate that the VPN session timeout alert-interval attribute will be
inherited from the Default Group Policy:
hostname(config-webvpn)# no vpn-session-timeout alert-interval
• The vpn-session-timeout alert-interval none indicates that users will not receive an alert.
Note Clientless SSL VPN does not use ACLs defined in the vpn-filter command.
The following example shows how to set a filter that invokes an ACL named acl_vpn for the user named
anyuser:
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Specify the IPv6 Address and Netmask
hostname(config-username)
The following example shows how to set an IP address of 10.92.166.7 for a user named anyuser:
Specify the network mask to use with the IP address specified in the previous step. If you used the
no vpn-framed-ip-address command, do not specify a network mask. To remove the subnet mask, enter the
no form of this command. There is no default behavior or value.
The following example shows how to set a subnet mask of 255.255.255. 254 for a user named anyuser:
The following example shows how to set an IP address and netmask of 2001::3000:1000:2000:1/64 for a user
named anyuser. This address indicates a prefix value of 2001:0000:0000:0000 and an interface ID of
3000:1000:2000:1.
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Restrict Remote User Access
Enter this command to configure one or more tunneling modes. You must configure at least one tunneling
mode for users to connect over a VPN tunnel.
The following example shows how to configure clientless SSL VPN and IPsec tunneling modes for the user
named anyuser:
The following example shows how to set group lock for the user named anyuser:
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Enable Password Storage for Software Client Users
hostname(config-username)
This command has no bearing on interactive hardware client authentication or individual user authentication
for hardware clients.
The following example shows how to enable password storage for the user named anyuser:
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CHAPTER 5
IP Addresses for VPNs
• Configure an IP Address Assignment Policy, on page 171
• Configure Local IP Address Pools, on page 173
• Configure AAA Addressing, on page 174
• Configure DHCP Addressing, on page 175
Use one of the following methods to specify a way to assign IP addresses to remote access clients.
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Configure IPv4 Address Assignments
Enable an address assignment method for the ASA to use when assigning IPv4 address to VPN connections.
The available methods to obtain an IP address are from a AAA server, DHCP server, or a local address pool.
All of these methods are enabled by default.
vpn-addr-assign {aaa | dhcp | local [reuse-delay minutes]}
Example:
For example, you can configure the reuse of an IP address for between 0 and 480 minutes after the IP address
has been released.
hostname(config)#vpn-addr-assign aaa
hostname(config)#vpn-addr-assign local reuse-delay 180
This example uses the no form of the command to disable an address assignment method.
hostname(config)# no vpn-addr-assign dhcp
Enable an address assignment method for the ASA to use when assigning IPv6 address to VPN connections.
The available methods to obtain an IP address are from a AAA server or a local address pool. Both of these
methods are enabled by default.
ipv6-vpn-addr-assign {aaa | local}
Example:
hostname(config)# ipv6-vpn-addr-assign aaa
This example uses the no form of the command to disable an address assignment method.
hostname(config)# no ipv6-vpn-addr-assign local
Use one of these methods to view the address assignment method configured on the ASA:
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Configure Local IP Address Pools
Step 1 Configure IP address pools as the address assignment method. Enter the vpn-addr-assign command with the
local argument.
Example:
hostname(config)# vpn-addr-assign local
Step 2 Configure an address pool. The command names the pool, specifies a range of IPv4 addresses and the subnet
mask.
ip local poolpoolname first_address-last_addressmaskmask
Example:
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Configure Local IPv6 Address Pools
This example configures an IP address pool named firstpool.The starting address is 10.20.30.40and the ending
address is 10.20.30.50.The network mask is 255.255.255.0.
hostname(config)# ip local pool firstpool 10.20.30.40-10.20.30.50 mask 255.255.255.0
Step 1 Configures IP address pools as the address assignment method, enter the ipv6-vpn-addr-assign command
with the local argument.
Example:
hostname(config)# ipv6-vpn-addr-assign local
Step 2 Configures an address pool. The command names the pool, identifies the starting IPv6 address, the prefix
length in bits, and the number of addresses to use in the range.
ipv6 local pool pool_name starting_address prefix_length number_of_addresses
Example:
This example configures an IP address pool named ipv6pool. The starting address is 2001:DB8::1, the prefix
length is 32 bits, and the number of addresses to use in the pool is 100.
hostname(config)# ipv6 local pool ipv6pool 2001:DB8::1/32 100
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Configure DHCP Addressing
Procedure
Step 1 To configure AAA as the address assignment method, enter the vpn-addr-assign command with the aaa
argument:
hostname(config)# vpn-addr-assign aaa
hostname(config)#
Step 2 To establish the tunnel group called firstgroup as a remote access or LAN-to-LAN tunnel group, enter the
tunnel-group command with the type keyword. The following example configures a remote access tunnel
group.
hostname(config)# tunnel-group firstgroup type ipsec-ra
hostname(config)#
Step 3 To enter general-attributes configuration mode, which lets you define a AAA server group for the tunnel
group called firstgroup, enter the tunnel-group command with the general-attributes argument.
hostname(config)# tunnel-group firstgroup general-attributes
hostname(config-general)#
Step 4 To specify the AAA server group to use for authentication, enter the authentication-server-group command.
hostname(config-general)# authentication-server-group RAD2
hostname(config-general)#
What to do next
This command has more arguments that this example includes. For more information, see the command
reference.
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Configure DHCP Addressing
not define a network scope, the DHCP server assigns IP addresses in the order of the address pools configured.
It goes through the pools until it identifies an unassigned address.
The following configuration includes more steps than are necessary, in that previously you might have named
and defined the connection profile type as remote access, and named and identified the group policy as internal
or external. These steps appear in the following examples as a reminder that you have no access to subsequent
tunnel-group and group-policy commands until you set these values.
Step 2 Establish the connection profile called firstgroup as a remote access connection profile.
tunnel-group firstgroup type remote-access
Step 3 Enter the general-attributes configuration mode for the connection profile so that you can configure a DHCP
server.
tunnel-group firstgroup general-attributes
Step 4 Define the DHCP server by IPv4 address. You can not define a DHCP server by an IPv6 address. You can
specify more than one DHCP server address for a connection profile. Enter the dhcp-server command. This
command allows you to configure the ASA to send additional options to the specified DHCP servers when
it is trying to get IP addresses for VPN clients.
dhcp-server IPv4_address_of_DHCP_server
Example:
The example configures a DHCP server at IP address 172.33.44.19.
hostname(config-general)# dhcp-server 172.33.44.19
hostname(config-general)#
Example:
The example enters group policy attributes configuration mode for remotegroup group-policy.
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Configure DHCP Addressing
Step 7 (Optional) Enter the group-policy attributes configuration mode, which lets you configure a subnetwork of
IP addresses for the DHCP server to use. Enter the group-policy command with the attributes keyword.
Example:
hostname(config)# group-policy remotegroup attributes
Step 8 (Optional) To specify the range of IP addresses the DHCP server should use to assign addresses to users of
the group policy called remotegroup, enter the dhcp-network-scope command.
The example configures a network scope of 192.86.0.0.
hostname(config-group-policy)# dhcp-network-scope 192.86.0.0
hostname(config-group-policy)#
Note The dhcp-network-scope must be a routable IP address and not the subset of the DHCP pool. The
DHCP server determines which subnet this IP address belongs to and assigns an IP address from
that pool. You can use any IP address as the dhcp-network-scope, but it may require that static
routes be added to the network.
Example
A summary of the configuration that these examples create follows:
hostname(config)# vpn-addr-assign dhcp
hostname(config)# tunnel-group firstgroup type remote-access
hostname(config)# tunnel-group firstgroup general-attributes
hostname(config-general)# dhcp-server 172.33.44.19
hostname(config-general)# exit
hostname(config)# group-policy remotegroup internal
hostname(config)# group-policy remotegroup attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# dhcp-network-scope 192.86.0.0
What to do next
See the dhcp-server command in the Cisco Security Appliance Command Reference guide for more
information.
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CHAPTER 6
Remote Access IPsec VPNs
• About Remote Access IPsec VPNs, on page 179
• Licensing Requirements for Remote Access IPsec VPNs for 3.1, on page 180
• Restrictions for IPsec VPN, on page 180
• Configure Remote Access IPsec VPNs, on page 180
• Configuration Examples for Remote Access IPsec VPNs, on page 187
• Configuration Examples for Standards-Based IPSec IKEv2 Remote Access VPN in Multiple-Context
Mode, on page 188
• Configuration Examples for AnyConnect IPSec IKEv2 Remote Access VPN in Multiple-Context Mode,
on page 189
• Feature History for Remote Access VPNs, on page 191
A transform set combines an encryption method and an authentication method. During the IPsec security
association negotiation with ISAKMP, the peers agree to use a particular transform set to protect a particular
data flow. The transform set must be the same for both peers.
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Licensing Requirements for Remote Access IPsec VPNs for 3.1
A transform set protects the data flows for the ACL specified in the associated crypto map entry. You can
create transform sets in the ASA configuration, and then specify a maximum of 11 of them in a crypto map
or dynamic crypto map entry. For more overview information, including a table that lists valid encryption
and authentication methods, see Create an IKEv1 Transform Set or IKEv2 Proposal, on page 183.
You can configure the ASA to assign an IPv4 address, an IPv6 address, or both an IPv4 and an IPv6 address
to an AnyConnect client by creating internal pools of addresses on the ASA or by assigning a dedicated address
to a local user on the ASA.
The endpoint must have the dual-stack protocol implemented in its operating system to be assigned both types
of addresses. In both scenarios, when no IPv6 address pools are left but IPv4 addresses are available or when
no IPv4 address pools are left but IPv6 addresses are available, connection still occurs. The client is not
notified; however, so the administrator must look through the ASA logs for the details.
Assigning an IPv6 address to the client is supported for the SSL protocol.
IPsec remote access VPN using IKEv2 requires an AnyConnect Plus or Apex license, available separately.
IPsec remote access VPN using IKEv1 and IPsec site-to-site VPN using IKEv1 or IKEv2 uses the Other VPN
license that comes with the base license. See Cisco ASA Series Feature Licenses for maximum values per
model.
Configure Interfaces
An ASA has at least two interfaces, referred to here as outside and inside. Typically, the outside interface is
connected to the public Internet, while the inside interface is connected to a private network and is protected
from public access.
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Configure ISAKMP Policy and Enabling ISAKMP on the Outside Interface
To begin, configure and enable two interfaces on the ASA. Then assign a name, IP address and subnet mask.
Optionally, configure its security level, speed and duplex operation on the security appliance.
Procedure
Step 2 Set the IP address and subnet mask for the interface.
ip address ip_address [mask] [standby ip_address]
Example:
hostname(config)# interface ethernet0
hostname(config-if)# ip address 10.10.4.200 255.255.0.0
Step 3 Specify a name for the interface (maximum of 48 characters). You cannot change this name after you set it.
nameif name
Example:
hostname(config-if)# nameif outside
hostname(config-if)#
Step 1 Specify the authentication method and the set of parameters to use during IKEv1 negotiation.
Priority uniquely identifies the Internet Key Exchange (IKE) policy and assigns a priority to the policy. Use
an integer from 1 to 65,534, with 1 being the highest priority and 65,534 the lowest.
In the steps that follow, we set the priority to 1.
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Configure an Address Pool
Example:
hostname(config)#
crypto ikev1 policy 1 encryption 3des
hostname(config)#
Step 3 Specify the hash algorithm for an IKE policy (also called the HMAC variant).
crypto ikev1 policy priority hash {md5 | sha}
Example:
hostname(config)# crypto ikev1 policy 1 hash sha
hostname(config)#
Step 4 Specify the Diffie-Hellman group for the IKE policy—the crypto protocol that allows the IPsec client and the
ASA to establish a shared secret key.
crypto ikev1 policy priority group {1 | 2 | 5| }
Example:
hostname(config)# crypto ikev1 policy 1 group 2
hostname(config)#
Step 5 Specify the encryption key lifetime—the number of seconds each security association should exist before
expiring.
crypto ikev1 policy priority lifetime {seconds}
The range for a finite lifetime is 120 to 2147483647 seconds. Use 0 seconds for an infinite lifetime.
Example:
hostname(config)# crypto ikev1 policy 1 lifetime 43200
hostname(config)#
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Add a User
Procedure
Create an address pool with a range of IP addresses, from which the ASA assigns addresses to the clients.
ip local pool poolname first-address—last-address [mask mask]
The address mask is optional. However, You must supply the mask value when the IP addresses assigned to
VPN clients belong to a non-standard network and the data could be routed incorrectly if you use the default
mask. A typical example is when the IP local pool contains 10.10.10.0/255.255.255.0 addresses, since this is
a Class A network by default. This could cause routing issues when the VPN client needs to access different
subnets within the 10 network over different interfaces.
Example:
hostname(config)# ip local pool testpool 192.168.0.10-192.168.0.15
hostname(config)#
Add a User
Procedure
Procedure
Step 1 Configure an IKEv1 transform set that specifies the IPsec IKEv1 encryption and hash algorithms to be used
to ensure data integrity.
crypto ipsec ikev1 transform-set transform-set-name encryption-method [authentication]
Use one of the following values for encryption:
• esp-aes to use AES with a 128-bit key.
• esp-aes-192 to use AES with a 192-bit key.
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Create an IKEv1 Transform Set or IKEv2 Proposal
Example:
To configure an IKEv1 transform set:
hostname(config)# crypto ipsec transform set FirstSet esp-3des esp-md5-hmac
Step 2 Configure an IKEv2 proposal set that specifies the IPsec IKEv2 protocol, encryption, and integrity algorithms
to be used.
esp specifies the Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) IPsec protocol (currently the only supported protocol
for IPsec).
crypto ipsec ikev2 ipsec-proposal proposal_name
protocol {esp} {encryption {des | 3des | aes | aes-192 | aes-256 | null} | integrity {md5 | sha-1}
Use one of the following values for encryption:
• des to use 56-bit DES-CBC encryption for ESP.
• 3des (default) to use the triple DES encryption algorithm for ESP.
• aes to use AES with a 128-bit key encryption for ESP.
• aes-192 to use AES with a 192-bit key encryption for ESP.
• aes-256 to use AES with a 256-bit key encryption for ESP.
• null to not use encryption for ESP.
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Define a Tunnel Group
Procedure
Step 1 Create an IPsec remote access tunnel-group (also called connection profile).
tunnel-group name type type
Example:
hostname(config)# tunnel-group testgroup type ipsec-ra
hostname(config)#
Step 2 Enter tunnel group general attributes mode where you can enter an authentication method.
tunnel-group name general-attributes
Example:
hostname(config)# tunnel-group testgroup general-attributes
hostname(config-tunnel-general)#
Step 4 Enter tunnel group ipsec attributes mode where you can enter IPsec-specific attributes for IKEv1 connections.
tunnel-group name ipsec-attributes
Example:
hostname(config)# tunnel-group testgroup ipsec-attributes
hostname(config-tunnel-ipsec)#
Step 5 (Optional) Configure a pre-shared key (IKEv1 only). The key can be an alphanumeric string from 1-128
characters.
The keys for the adaptive security appliance and the client must be identical. If a Cisco VPN Client with a
different preshared key size tries to connect, the client logs an error message indicating it failed to authenticate
the peer.
ikev1 pre-shared-key key
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Create a Dynamic Crypto Map
Example:
hostname(config-tunnel-ipsec)# pre-shared-key 44kkaol59636jnfx
Procedure
Step 1 Create a dynamic crypto map and specifies an IKEv1 transform set or IKEv2 proposal for the map.
• For IKEv1, use this command:
crypto dynamic-map dynamic-map-name seq-num set ikev1 transform-set transform-set-name
• For IKEv2, use this command:
crypto dynamic-map dynamic-map-name seq-num set ikev2 ipsec-proposal proposal-name
Example:
hostname(config)# crypto dynamic-map dyn1 1 set ikev1 transform-set FirstSet
hostname(config)#
hostname(config)# crypto dynamic-map dyn1 1 set ikev2 ipsec-proposal secure_proposal
hostname(config)#
Step 2 (Optional) Enable Reverse Route Injection for any connection based on this crypto map entry.
crypto dynamic-map dynamic-map-name dynamic-seq-num set reverse-route
Example:
hostname(config)# crypto dynamic-map dyn1 1 set reverse route
hostname(config)#
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Configuring IPSec IKEv2 Remote Access VPN in Multi-Context Mode
Procedure
Step 1 Create a crypto map entry that uses a dynamic crypto map.
crypto map map-name seq-num ipsec-isakmp dynamic dynamic-map-name
Example:
hostname(config)# crypto map mymap 1 ipsec-isakmp dynamic dyn1
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Configuration Examples for Standards-Based IPSec IKEv2 Remote Access VPN in Multiple-Context Mode
esp-aes-256 esp-sha-hmac
hostname(config)# tunnel-group RAVPN type remote-access
hostname(config)# tunnel-group RAVPN general-attributes
hostname(config-general)# address-pool POOL
hostname(config)# tunnel-group RAVPN ipsec-attributes
hostname(config-ipsec)# ikev1 pre-shared-key ravpnkey
hostname(config)# crypto dynamic-map DYNMAP 1 set ikev1
transform-set AES256-SHA
hostname(config)# crypto dynamic-map DYNMAP 1 set reverse-route
hostname(config)# crypto map CMAP 1 ipsec-isakmp dynamic DYNMAP
hostname(config)# crypto map CMAP interface outside
The following example shows how to configure a remote access IPsec/IKEv2 VPN:
class default
limit-resource All 0
limit-resource Mac-addresses 65536
limit-resource ASDM 5
limit-resource SSH 5
limit-resource Telnet 5
limit-resource VPN AnyConnect 4.0%
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Configuration Examples for AnyConnect IPSec IKEv2 Remote Access VPN in Multiple-Context Mode
hostname(config)#context CTX2
hostname(config-ctx)#member default ===============> License allotment for contexts using
class
hostname(config-ctx)#allocate-interface Ethernet1/1.200
hostname(config-ctx)#allocate-interface Ethernet1/3.100
hostname(config-ctx)#config-url disk0:/CTX2.cfg
IPSec/IKEv2 Remote Access Connections from Standard-based Clients by default fall on tunnel group
"DefaultRAGroup".
hostname/CTX2(config)#tunnel-group DefaultRAGroup type remote-access
hostname/CTX2(config)#tunnel-group DefaultRAGroup general-attributes
hostname/CTX2(config-tunnel-general)#default-group-policy GroupPolicy_CTX2-IKEv2
hostname/CTX2(config-tunnel-general)#address-pool CTX2-pool
hostname/CTX2(config-tunnel-general)#authentication-server-group ISE
hostname/CTX2(config-tunnel-general)#exit
hostname/CTX2(config)#
hostname/CTX2(config)#tunnel-group DefaultRAGroup ipsec-attributes
hostname/CTX2(config-tunnel-ipsec)#ikev2 remote-authentication eap query-identity
hostname/CTX2(config-tunnel-ipsec)#ikev2 local-authentication certificate ASDM_TrustPoint0
hostname/CTX2(config-tunnel-ipsec)#exit
hostname/CTX2(config)#
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Configuration Examples for AnyConnect IPSec IKEv2 Remote Access VPN in Multiple-Context Mode
class default
limit-resource All 0
limit-resource Mac-addresses 65536
limit-resource ASDM 5
limit-resource SSH 5
limit-resource Telnet 5
limit-resource VPN AnyConnect 4.0%
hostname(config)#context CTX3
hostname(config-ctx)#member default ===============> License allotment for contexts using
class
hostname(config-ctx)#allocate-interface Ethernet1/1.200
hostname(config-ctx)#allocate-interface Ethernet1/3.100
hostname(config-ctx)#config-url disk0:/CTX3.cfg
Virtual File System creation for each context can have Cisco Anyconnect files like Image and profile.
hostname(config-ctx)#storage-url shared disk0:/shared disk0
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Feature History for Remote Access VPNs
hostname/CTX3(config-tunnel-general)#address-pool ctx3-pool
hostname/CTX3(config)#tunnel-group CTX3-IKEv2 webvpn-attributes
hostname/CTX3(config-tunnel-webvpn)#group-alias CTX3-IKEv2 enable
Remote access VPNs for IPsec 7.0 Remote access VPNs allow users
IKEv1 and SSL. to connect to a central site through
a secure connection over a TCP/IP
network such as the Internet.
Remote access VPNs for IPsec 8.4(1) Added IPsec IKEv2 support for the
IKEv2. AnyConnect Secure Mobility
Client.
Remote access VPNs for IPsec 9.9(2) Support for configuring ASA to
IKEv2 in Multi-Context mode allow Anyconnect and third party
Standards-based IPSec IKEv2 VPN
clients to establish Remote Access
VPN sessions to ASA operating in
multi-context mode.
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CHAPTER 7
LAN-to-LAN IPsec VPNs
A LAN-to-LAN VPN connects networks in different geographic locations.
You can create LAN-to-LAN IPsec connections with Cisco peers and with third-party peers that comply with
all relevant standards. These peers can have any mix of inside and outside addresses using IPv4 and IPv6
addressing.
This chapter describes how to build a LAN-to-LAN VPN connection.
• Summary of the Configuration, on page 193
• Configure Site-to-Site VPN in Multi-Context Mode, on page 194
• Configure Interfaces, on page 195
• Configure ISAKMP Policy and Enable ISAKMP on the Outside Interface, on page 196
• Create an IKEv1 Transform Set, on page 198
• Create an IKEv2 Proposal, on page 199
• Configure an ACL, on page 200
• Define a Tunnel Group, on page 201
• Create a Crypto Map and Applying It To an Interface, on page 202
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Configure Site-to-Site VPN in Multi-Context Mode
Procedure
Step 1 To configure the VPN in multi-mode, configure a resource class and choose VPN licenses as part of the
allowed resource. The "Configuring a Class for Resource Management" provides these configuration steps.
The following is an example configuration:
class ctx1
limit-resource VPN Burst Other 100
limit-resource VPN Other 1000
Step 2 Configure a context and make it a member of the configured class that allows VPN licenses. The following
is an example configuration:
context context1
member ctx1
allocate-interface GigabitEthernet3/0.2
allocate-interface GigabitEthernet3/1.2
allocate-interface Management0/0
config-url disk0:/sm_s2s_ik1_ip4_no_webvpn.txt
join-failover-group 1
Step 3 Configure connection profiles, policies, crypto maps, and so on, just as you would with single context VPN
configuration of site-to-site VPN.
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Configure Interfaces
Configure Interfaces
An ASA has at least two interfaces, referred to here as outside and inside. Typically, the outside interface is
connected to the public Internet, while the inside interface is connected to a private network and is protected
from public access.
To begin, configure and enable two interfaces on the ASA. Then, assign a name, IP address and subnet mask.
Optionally, configure its security level, speed, and duplex operation on the security appliance.
Note The ASA’s outside interface address (for both IPv4/IPv6) cannot overlap with the private side address space.
Procedure
Step 1 To enter Interface configuration mode, in global configuration mode enter the interface command with the
default name of the interface to configure. In the following example the interface is ethernet0.
Step 2 To set the IP address and subnet mask for the interface, enter the ip address command. In the following
example the IP address is 10.10.4.100 and the subnet mask is 255.255.0.0.
Step 3 To name the interface, enter the nameif command, maximum of 48 characters. You cannot change this name
after you set it. In the following example the name of the ethernet0 interface is outside.
Step 4 To enable the interface, enter the no version of the shutdown command. By default, interfaces are disabled.
hostname(config-if)# no shutdown
hostname(config-if)#
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Configure ISAKMP Policy and Enable ISAKMP on the Outside Interface
With IKEv1 policies, for each parameter, you set one value. For IKEv2, you can configure multiple encryption
and authentication types, and multiple integrity algorithms for a single policy. The ASA orders the settings
from the most secure to the least secure and negotiates with the peer using that order. This allows you to
potentially send a single proposal to convey all the allowed transforms instead of the need to send each allowed
combination as with IKEv1.
The following sections provide procedures for creating IKEv1 and IKEv2 policies and enabling them on an
interface:
• Configure ISAKMP Policies for IKEv1 Connections, on page 196
• Configure ISAKMP Policies for IKEv2 Connections, on page 198
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Configure ISAKMP Policies for IKEv1 Connections
Procedure
Step 2 Set the authentication method. The following example configures a preshared key:
Step 3 Set the encryption method. The following example configures 3DES:
Step 4 Set the HMAC method. The following example configures SHA-1:
Step 5 Set the Diffie-Hellman group. The following example configures Group 2:
hostname(config-ikev1-policy)# group 2
hostname(config-ikev1-policy)#
Step 6 Set the encryption key lifetime. The following example configures 43,200 seconds (12 hours):
Step 7 Enable IKEv1 on the interface named outside in either single or multiple context mode:
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Configure ISAKMP Policies for IKEv2 Connections
Procedure
Step 2 Set the encryption method. The following example configures 3DES:
hostname(config-ikev2-policy)# encryption 3des
hostname(config-ikev2-policy)#
Step 3 Set the Diffie-Hellman group. The following example configures Group 2:
hostname(config-ikev2-policy)# group 2
hostname(config-ikev2-policy)#
Step 4 Set the pseudo-random function (PRF) used as the algorithm to derive keying material and hashing operations
required for the IKEv2 tunnel encryption. The following example configures SHA-1 (an HMAC variant):
hostname(config-ikev12-policy)# prf sha
hostname(config-ikev2-policy)#
Step 5 Set the encryption key lifetime. The following example configures 43,200 seconds (12 hours):
hostname(config-ikev2-policy)# lifetime seconds 43200
hostname(config-ikev2-policy)#
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Create an IKEv2 Proposal
A transform set protects the data flows for the ACL specified in the associated crypto map entry. You can
create transform sets in the ASA configuration, and then specify a maximum of 11 of them in a crypto map
or dynamic crypto map entry.
The table below lists valid encryption and authentication methods.
esp-des esp-md5-hmac
esp-aes-192
esp-aes-256
esp-null
Tunnel Mode is the usual way to implement IPsec between two ASAs that are connected over an untrusted
network, such as the public Internet. Tunnel mode is the default and requires no configuration.
To configure a transform set, perform the following site-to-site tasks in either single or multiple context mode:
Procedure
Step 1 In global configuration mode enter the crypto ipsec ikev1 transform-set command. The following example
configures a transform set with the name FirstSet, esp-3des encryption, and esp-md5-hmac authentication.
The syntax is as follows:
esp-sha-hmac (default)
crypto ipsec ikev1 transform-set transform-set-nameencryption-method authentication-method
hostname(config)# crypto ipsec transform-set FirstSet esp-3des esp-md5-hmac
hostname(config)#
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Configure an ACL
the peer using that order. This allows you to potentially send a single proposal to convey all the allowed
transforms instead of the need to send each allowed combination as with IKEv1.
The table below lists valid IKEv2 encryption and authentication methods.
aes .
aes-192
aes-256
To configure an IKEv2 proposal, perform the following tasks in either single or multiple context mode:
Procedure
Step 1 In global configuration mode, use the crypto ipsec ikev2 ipsec-proposal command to enter ipsec proposal
configuration mode where you can specify multiple encryption and integrity types for the proposal. In this
example, secure is the name of the proposal:
hostname(config)# crypto ipsec ikev2 ipsec-proposal secure
hostname(config-ipsec-proposal)#
Step 2 Then enter a protocol and encryption types. ESP is the only supported protocol. For example:
hostname(config-ipsec-proposal)#
protocol esp encryption 3des aes des
hostname(config-ipsec-proposal)#
Configure an ACL
The ASA uses access control lists to control network access. By default, the adaptive security appliance denies
all traffic. You need to configure an ACL that permits traffic. For more information, see "Information About
Access Control Lists" in the general operations configuration guide.
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Define a Tunnel Group
The ACLs that you configure for this LAN-to-LAN VPN control connections are based on the source and
translated destination IP addresses. Configure ACLs that mirror each other on both sides of the connection.
An ACL for VPN traffic uses the translated address.
Note For more information on configuring an ACL with a VPN filter, see the Specify a VLAN for Remote Access
or Apply a Unified Access Control Rule to the Group Policy, on page 125.
Procedure
Step 1 Enter the access-list extended command. The following example configures an ACL named l2l_list that lets
traffic from IP addresses in the 192.168.0.0 network travel to the 150.150.0.0 network. The syntax is access-list
listname extended permit ip source-ipaddress source-netmask destination-ipaddress destination-netmask.
Step 2 Configure an ACL for the ASA on the other side of the connection that mirrors the ACL. Subnets that are
defined in two different crypto ACLs and are attached to the same crypto map should not overlap. In the
following example, the prompt for the peer is hostname2.
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Create a Crypto Map and Applying It To an Interface
To establish a basic LAN-to-LAN connection, you must set two attributes for a tunnel group:
• Set the connection type to IPsec LAN-to-LAN.
• Configure an authentication method for the IP address (that is, a preshared key for IKEv1 and IKEv2).
Procedure
Step 1 To set the connection type to IPsec LAN-to-LAN, enter the tunnel-group command.
The syntax is tunnel-group name type type, where name is the name you assign to the tunnel group, and type
is the type of tunnel. The tunnel types as you enter them in the CLI are:
• remote-access (IPsec, SSL, and clientless SSL remote access)
• ipsec-l2l (IPsec LAN-to-LAN)
In the following example, the name of the tunnel group is the IP address of the LAN-to-LAN peer, 10.10.4.108.
Note LAN-to-LAN tunnel groups that have names that are not IP addresses can be used only if the tunnel
authentication method is Digital Certificates and/or the peer is configured to use Aggressive Mode.
1.
Step 2 To set the authentication method to use a preshared key, enter the ipsec-attributes mode and then enter the
ikev1pre-shared-key command to create the preshared key. You need to use the same preshared key on both
ASAs for this LAN-to-LAN connection.
The key is an alphanumeric string of 1-128 characters.
In the following example, the IKEv1 preshared key is 44kkaol59636jnfx:
To verify that the tunnel is up and running, use the show vpn-sessiondb summary, show vpn-sessiondb
detail l2l, or show crypto ipsec sa command.
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Create a Crypto Map and Applying It To an Interface
For IPsec to succeed, both peers must have crypto map entries with compatible configurations. For two crypto
map entries to be compatible, they must, at a minimum, meet the following criteria:
• The crypto map entries must contain compatible crypto ACLs (for example, mirror image ACLs). If the
responding peer uses dynamic crypto maps, the entries in the ASA crypto ACL must be “permitted” by
the peer’s crypto ACL.
• The crypto map entries each must identify the other peer (unless the responding peer is using a dynamic
crypto map).
• The crypto map entries must have at least one transform set in common.
If you create more than one crypto map entry for a given interface, use the sequence number (seq-num) of
each entry to rank it: the lower the seq-num, the higher the priority. At the interface that has the crypto map
set, the ASA evaluates traffic against the entries of higher priority maps first.
Create multiple crypto map entries for a given interface if either of the following conditions exist:
• Different peers handle different data flows.
• You want to apply different IPsec security to different types of traffic (to the same or separate peers),
for example, if you want traffic between one set of subnets to be authenticated, and traffic between
another set of subnets to be both authenticated and encrypted. In this case, define the different types of
traffic in two separate ACLs, and create a separate crypto map entry for each crypto ACL.
Note
To create a crypto map and apply it to the outside interface in global configuration mode, perform the following
steps in either single or multiple context mode:
Procedure
Step 1 To assign an ACL to a crypto map entry, enter the crypto map match address command.
The syntax is crypto map map-name seq-num match address aclname. In the following example the map
name is abcmap, the sequence number is 1, and the ACL name is l2l_list.
hostname(config)# crypto map abcmap 1 match address l2l_list
hostname(config)#
Step 2 To identify the peer (s) for the IPsec connection, enter the crypto map set peer command.
The syntax is crypto map map-name seq-num set peer {ip_address1 | hostname1}[... ip_address10 |
hostname10]. In the following example the peer name is 10.10.4.108.
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Step 3 To specify an IKEv1 transform set for a crypto map entry, enter the crypto map ikev1 set transform-set
command.
The syntax is crypto map map-name seq-num ikev1 set transform-set transform-set-name. In the following
example, the transform set name is FirstSet.
hostname(config)# crypto map abcmap 1 set transform-set FirstSet
hostname(config)#
Step 4 To specify an IKEv2 proposal for a crypto map entry, enter the crypto map ikev2 set ipsec-proposal command:
The syntax is crypto map map-name seq-num set ikev2 ipsec-proposal proposal-name. In the following
example, the proposal name is secure.
With the crypto map command, you can specify multiple IPsec proposals for a single map index. In that case,
multiple proposals are transmitted to the IKEv2 peer as part of the negotiation, and the order of the proposals
is determined by the administrator upon the ordering of the crypto map entry.
Note If combined mode (AES-GCM/GMAC) and normal mode (all others) algorithms exist in the IPsec
proposal, then you cannot send a single proposal to the peer. You must have at least two proposals
in this case, one for combined mode and one for normal mode algorithms.
Procedure
Step 1 Enter the crypto map interface command. The syntax is crypto map map-name interface interface-name.
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CHAPTER 8
AnyConnect VPN Client Connections
This section describes how to configure AnyConnect VPN Client Connections.
• About the AnyConnect VPN Client, on page 207
• Licensing Requirements for AnyConnect, on page 208
• Configure AnyConnect Connections, on page 208
• Monitor AnyConnect Connections, on page 226
• Log Off AnyConnect VPN Sessions, on page 227
• Feature History for AnyConnect Connections, on page 228
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Licensing Requirements for AnyConnect
VPN Licenses require an AnyConnect Plus or Apex license, available separately. See Cisco ASA Series
Feature Licenses for maximum values per model.
If you start a clientless SSL VPN session and then start an AnyConnect client session from the portal, 1 session
is used in total. However, if you start the AnyConnect client first (from a standalone client, for example) and
then log into the clientless SSL VPN portal, then 2 sessions are used.
Procedure
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Configure the ASA to Web-Deploy the Client
The ASA downloads portions of each client in the order you specify until it matches the operating system of
the remote PC. Therefore, assign the lowest number to the image used by the most commonly-encountered
operating system.
anyconnect image filename order
Example:
Note You must issue the anyconnect enable command after configuring the AnyConnect images with
the anyconnect image command. If you do not enable AnyConnect, it will not operate as expected,
and show webvpn anyconnect considers the SSL VPN client as not enabled rather than listing the
installed AnyConnect packages.
Step 3 Without issuing this command, AnyConnect does not function as expected, and a show webvpn anyconnect
command returns that the “SSL VPN is not enabled,” instead of listing the installed AnyConnect packages.
anyconnect enable
Step 4 (Optional) Create an address pool. You can use another method of address assignment, such as DHCP and/or
user-assigned addressing.
ip local pool poolname startaddr-endaddr mask mask
Example:
hostname(config)# ip local pool vpn_users 209.165.200.225-209.165.200.254
mask 255.255.255.224
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Enable Permanent Client Installation
Step 7 Enable the display of the tunnel-group list on the clientless portal and AnyConnect GUI login page. The list
of aliases is defined by the group-alias name enable command.
group-alias name enable
Example:
hostname(config)# tunnel-group telecommuters webvpn-attributes
hostname(config-tunnel-webvpn)# group-alias sales_department enable
Step 8 Specify the AnyConnect clients as a permitted VPN tunneling protocol for the group or user.
tunnel-group-list enable
Example:
hostname(config)# webvpn
hostname(config-webvpn)# tunnel-group-list enable
Step 9 Specify SSL as a permitted VPN tunneling protocol for the group or user. You can also specify additional
protocols. For more information, see the vpn-tunnel-protocol command in the command reference.
vpn-tunnel-protocol
Example:
hostname(config)# group-policy sales attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# webvpn
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# vpn-tunnel-protocol
What to do next
For more information about assigning users to group policies, see Chapter 6, Configuring Connection Profiles,
Group Policies, and Users.
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Configure DTLS
Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) allows the AnyConnect client establishing an SSL VPN connection
to use two simultaneous tunnels—an SSL tunnel and a DTLS tunnel. Using DTLS avoids latency and bandwidth
problems associated with SSL connections and improves the performance of real-time applications that are
sensitive to packet delays.
Procedure
Disable DTLS for all AnyConnect client users with the enable interface tls-only command in webvpn
configuration mode.
If you disable DTLS, SSL VPN connections connect with an SSL VPN tunnel only.
hostname(config)# webvpn
hostname(config-webvpn)# enable outside tls-only
b) Configure the ports for SSL and DTLS using the port and dtls port commands.
hostname(config)# webvpn
hostname(config-webvpn)# enable outside
hostname(config-webvpn)# port 555
hostname(config-webvpn)# dtls port 556
b) If desired, enable DTLS compression using the anyconnect dtls compression command.
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Prompt Remote Users
You can enable the ASA to prompt remote SSL VPN client users to download the client with the anyconnect
ask command from group policy webvpn or username webvpn configuration modes:
[no] anyconnect ask {none | enable [default {webvpn | } timeout value]}
• anyconnect enable prompts the remote user to download the client or go to the clientless portal page
and waits indefinitely for user response.
• anyconnect ask enable default immediately downloads the client.
• anyconnect ask enable default webvpn immediately goes to the portal page.
• anyconnect ask enable default timeout value prompts the remote user to download the client or go to
the clientless portal page and waits the duration of value before taking the default action—downloading
the client.
• anyconnect ask enable default clientless timeout value prompts the remote user to download the client
or go to the clientless portal page, and waits the duration of value before taking the default
action—displaying the clientless portal page.
The figure below shows the prompt displayed to remote users when either default anyconnect timeout value
or default webvpn timeout value is configured:
Figure 5: Prompt Displayed to Remote Users for SSL VPN Client Download
Example
The following example configures the ASA to prompt the user to download the client or go to the
clientless portal page and wait 10 seconds for a response before downloading the client:
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# anyconnect ask enable default anyconnect timeout
10
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Enable AnyConnect Client Profile Downloads
Note The AnyConnect client protocol defaults to SSL. To enable IPsec IKEv2, you must configure the IKEv2
settings on the ASA and also configure IKEv2 as the primary protocol in the client profile. The IKEv2enabled
profile must be deployed to the endpoint computer; otherwise the client attempts to connect using SSL.
Procedure
Step 1 Use the profile editor from ASDM/ISE or the standalone profile editor to create a profile.
Step 2 Load the profile file into flash memory on the ASA using tftp or another method.
Step 3 Use the anyconnect profiles command from webvpn configuration mode to identify the file as a client profile
to load into cache memory.
Example:
The following example specifies the files sales_hosts.xml and engineering_hosts.xml as profiles:
Directory of cache:stc/profiles/
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Enable AnyConnect Client Deferred Upgrade
hostname(config-webvpn)#
Step 4 Enter group policy webvpn configuration mode and specify a client profile for a group policy with the
anyconnect profiles command:
Example:
You can enter the anyconnect profiles value command followed by a question mark (?) to view the available
profiles. For example:
The next example configures the group policy to use the profile sales with the client profile type vpn:
DeferredUpdateAllowed true false false True enables deferred update. If deferred update is
disabled (false), the settings below are ignored.
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DeferredUpdateDismissTimeout 0-300 (seconds) none (disabled) Number of seconds that the deferred upgrade prompt
is displayed before being dismissed automatically.
This attribute only applies when a deferred update
prompt is to be displayed (the minimum version
attribute is evaluated first).
If this attribute is missing, then the auto-dismiss
feature is disabled, and a dialog is displayed (if
required) until the user responds.
Setting this attribute to zero allows automatic
deferral or upgrade to be forced based on:
• The installed version and the value of
DeferredUpdateMinimumVersion.
• The value of DeferredUpdateDismissResponse.
Procedure
Step 1 Create the custom attribute types with the anyconnnect-custom-attr command in webvpn configuration
mode:
[no] anyconnect-custom-attr attr-type [description description ]
Example:
The following example shows how to add the custom attribute types DeferredUpdateAllowed and
DeferredUpdateDismissTimeout:
Step 2 Add named values for custom attributes with the anyconnect-custom-data command in global configuration
mode. For attributes with long values, you can provide a duplicate entry, and it allows concatenation. However,
with a duplicate configuration entry, the Defer Update dialog will not appear, and a user cannot defer the
upgrade; instead, the upgrade happens automatically.
[no] anyconnect-custom-data attr-type attr-name attr-value
Example:
The following example shows how to add a named value for the custom attribute type
DeferredUpdateDismissTimeout and for enabling DeferredUpdateAllowed:
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Enable DSCP Preservation
def-allowed true
Step 3 Add or remove the custom attribute named values to a group policy using the anyconnect-custom command:
• anyconnect-custom attr-type value attr-name
• anyconnect-custom attr-type none
• no anyconnect-custom attr-type
Example:
The following example shows how to enable Deferred Update for the group policy named sales and set the
timeout to 150 seconds:
Procedure
Step 1 Create the custom attribute types with the anyconnect-custom-attrcommand in webvpn configuration mode:
[no] anyconnect-custom-attr DSCPPreservationAllowed description Set to control Differentiated Services
Code Point (DSCP) on Windows or OS X platforms for DTLS connections only.
Step 2 Add named values for custom attributes with the anyconnect-custom-data command in global configuration
mode:
[no] anyconnect-custom-data DSCPPreservationAllowed true
Note By default, AnyConnect performs DSCP preservation (true). To disable it, set the custom attributes
to false on the headend and reinitiate the connection.
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Enable Start Before Logon
To enable new features, you must specify the new module names using the anyconnect modules command
from group policy webvpn or username webvpn configuration mode:
[no]anyconnect modules {none | value string}
Separate multiple strings with commas.
Procedure
Step 1 Enable the ASA to download the GINA module for VPN connection to specific groups or users using the
anyconnect modules vpngina command from group policy webvpn or username webvpn configuration modes.
Example:
In the following example, the user enters group-policy attributes mode for the group policy telecommuters,
enters webvpn configuration mode for the group policy, and specifies the string vpngina:
hostname(config)# group-policy telecommuters attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# webvpn
hostame(config-group-webvpn)#anyconnect modules value vpngina
The <UseStartBeforeLogon> tag determines whether the client uses SBL. To turn SBL on, replace false with
true. The example below shows the tag with SBL turned on:
<ClientInitialization>
<UseStartBeforeLogon>true</UseStartBeforeLogon>
</ClientInitialization>
Step 4 Save the changes to AnyConnectProfile.tmpl and update the profile file for the group or user on the ASA
using the profile command from webvpn configuration mode. For example:
asa1(config-webvpn)#anyconnect profiles sales disk0:/sales_hosts.xml
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Translating Languages for AnyConnect User Messages
Procedure
Step 1 Export a translation table template to a computer with the export webvpn translation-table command from
privileged EXEC mode.
In the following example, the show import webvpn translation-table command shows available translation
table templates and tables.
PortForwarder
url-list
webvpn
Citrix-plugin
RPC-plugin
Telnet-SSH-plugin
VNC-plugin
Translation Tables:
Then the user exports the translation table for the AnyConnect translation domain. The filename of the XML
file created is named client and contains empty message fields:
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Create Translation Tables
template tftp://209.165.200.225/client
In the next example, the user exports a translation table named zh, which was previously imported from a
template. zh is the abbreviation by Microsoft Internet Explorer for the Chinese language.
Step 2 Edit the Translation Table XML file. The following example shows a portion of the AnyConnect template.
The end of this output includes a message ID field (msgid) and a message string field (msgstr) for the message
Connected, which is displayed on the AnyConnect client GUI when the client establishes a VPN connection.
The complete template contains many pairs of message fields:
#: C:\cygwin\home\<user>\cvc\main\Api\AgentIfc.cpp:23
#: C:\cygwin\home\<user>\cvc\main\Api\check\AgentIfc.cpp:22
#: C:\cygwin\home\<user>\cvc\main\Api\save\AgentIfc.cpp:23
#: C:\cygwin\home\<user>\cvc\main\Api\save\AgentIfc.cpp~:20
#: C:\cygwin\home\<user>\cvc\main\Api\save\older\AgentIfc.cpp:22
msgid "Connected"
msgstr ""
The msgid contains the default translation. The msgstr that follows msgid provides the translation. To create
a translation, enter the translated text between the quotes of the msgstr string. For example, to translate the
message “Connected” with a Spanish translation, insert the Spanish text between the quotes:
msgid "Connected"
msgstr "Conectado"
Step 3 Import the translation table using the import webvpn translation-table command from privileged EXEC
mode. Be sure to specify the name of the new translation table with the abbreviation for the language that is
compatible with the browser.
In the following example, the XML file is imported es-us—the abbreviation used by Microsoft Internet
Explorer for Spanish spoken in the United States.
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Remove Translation Tables
customization
keepout
url-list
webvpn
Citrix-plugin
RPC-plugin
Telnet-SSH-plugin
VNC-plugin
Translation Tables:
es-us AnyConnect
Procedure
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Configuring Advanced AnyConnect SSL Features
Enable Rekey
When the ASA and the AnyConnect client perform a rekey on an SSL VPN connection, they renegotiate the
crypto keys and initialization vectors, increasing the security of the connection.
To enable the client to perform a rekey on an SSL VPN connection for a specific group or user, use the
anyconnect ssl rekey command from group-policy or username webvpn modes.
[no]anyconnect ssl rekey {method {new-tunnel | none | ssl} | time minutes}
• method new-tunnel specifies that the client establishes a new tunnel during rekey.
• method ssl specifies that the client establishes a new tunnel during rekey.
• method none disables rekey.
• time minutes specifies the number of minutes from the start of the session, or from the last rekey, until
the rekey takes place, from 1 to 10080 (1 week).
Note Configuring the rekey method as ssl or new-tunnel specifies that the client establishes a new tunnel during
rekey instead of the SSL renegotiation taking place during the rekey. See the command reference for a history
of the anyconnect ssl rekey command.
In the following example, the client is configured to renegotiate with SSL during rekey, which takes place
30 minutes after the session begins, for the existing group-policy sales:
hostname(config)# group-policy sales attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# webvpn
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# anyconnect ssl rekey method ssl
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# anyconnect ssl rekey time 30
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Configure Dead Peer Detection
Procedure
Or,
hostname# username username attributes
hostname(config-username)# webvpn
hostname (config-username-webvpn #
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Enable Keepalive
Example
The following example sets the frequency of DPD performed by the ASA to 30 seconds, and the
frequency of DPD performed by the client set to 10 seconds for the existing group-policy sales:
hostname(config)# group-policy sales attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# webvpn
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# anyconnect dpd-interval gateway 30
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# anyconnect dpd-interval client 10
Enable Keepalive
You can adjust the frequency of keepalive messages to ensure that an SSL VPN connection through a proxy,
firewall, or NAT device remains open, even if the device limits the time that the connection can be idle.
Adjusting the frequency also ensures that the client does not disconnect and reconnect when the remote user
is not actively running a socket-based application, such as Microsoft Outlook or Microsoft Internet Explorer.
Keepalives are enabled by default. If you disable keepalives, in the event of a failover, SSL VPN client sessions
are not carried over to the standby device.
To set the frequency of keepalive messages, use the keepalive command from group-policy webvpn or
username webvpn configuration mode: Use the no form of the command to remove the command from the
configuration and cause the value to be inherited:
[no] anyconnect ssl keepalive {none | seconds}
• none disables client keepalive messages.
• seconds enables the client to send keepalive messages, and specifies the frequency of the messages in
the range of 15 to 600 seconds.
In the following example, the ASA is configured to enable the client to send keepalive messages
with a frequency of 300 seconds (5 minutes), for the existing group-policy sales:
hostname(config)# group-policy sales attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# webvpn
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# anyconnect ssl keepalive 300
Use Compression
Compression increases the communications performance between the ASA and the client by reducing the
size of the packets being transferred for low-bandwidth connections. By default, compression for all SSL
VPN connections is enabled on the ASA, both at the global level and for specific groups or users.
Note When implementing compression on broadband connections, you must carefully consider the fact that
compression relies on loss-less connectivity. This is the main reason that it is not enabled by default on
broadband connections.
Compression must be turned-on globally using the compression command from global configuration mode,
and then it can be set for specific groups or users with the anyconnect ssl compression command in
group-policy and username webvpn modes.
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Adjust MTU Size
Example
The following example configures the MTU size to 1200 bytes for the group policy telecommuters:
hostname(config)# group-policy telecommuters attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# webvpn
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# anyconnect mtu 1200
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Enable IPv6 VPN Access
Procedure
Step 1 Copy the new client images to the ASA using the copy command from privileged EXEC mode, or using
another method.
Step 2 If the new client image files have the same filenames as the files already loaded, reenter the anyconnect image
command that is in the configuration. If the new filenames are different, uninstall the old files using the
[no]anyconnect imageimage command. Then use the anyconnect image command to assign an order to the
images and cause the ASA to load the new images.
Procedure
interface GigabitEthernet0/0
nameif outside
security-level 0
ip address 192.168.0.1 255.255.255.0
ipv6 enable ; Needed for IPv6.
!
interface GigabitEthernet0/1
nameif inside
security-level 100
ip address 10.10.0.1 255.255.0.0
ipv6 address 2001:DB8::1/32 ; Needed for IPv6.
ipv6 enable ; Needed for IPv6.
Step 2 Configure an 'ipv6 local pool' (used for IPv6 address assignment):
ipv6 local pool ipv6pool 2001:DB8:1:1::5/32 100 ; Use your IPv6 prefix here
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Monitor AnyConnect Connections
Note You can configure the ASA to assign an IPv4 address, an IPv6 address, or both an IPv4 and an IPv6
address to an AnyConnect client by creating internal pools of addresses on the ASA or by assigning
a dedicated address to a local user on the ASA.
Step 3 Add the ipv6 address pool to your tunnel group policy (or group-policy):
tunnel-group YourTunGrp1 general-attributes ipv6-address-pool ipv6pool
Note You must also configure an IPv4 address pool here as well (using the 'address-pool' command).
Command Purpose
show vpn-sessiondb anyconnect Enhances the VPN session summary to show OSPFv3
session information.
show vpn-sessiondb ratio encryption Shows the number of tunnels and percentages for the
Suite B algorithms (such as AES-GCM-128,
AES-GCM-192, AES-GCM-256, AES-GMAC-128,
and so on).
Example
The Inactivity field shows the elapsed time since an AnyConnect session lost connectivity. If the
session is active, 00:00m:00s appears in this field.
Username : lee
Index : 1 IP Addr : 209.165.200.232
Protocol : SSL VPN Client Encryption : 3DES
Hashing : SHA1 Auth Mode : userPassword
TCP Dst Port : 443 TCP Src Port : 54230
Bytes Tx : 20178 Bytes Rx : 8662
Pkts Tx : 27 Pkts Rx : 19
Client Ver : Cisco STC 1.1.0.117
Client Type : Internet Explorer
Group : DfltGrpPolicy
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Log Off AnyConnect VPN Sessions
You can log off individual sessions using either the name argument or the index argument:
vpn-sessiondb logoff name name
vpn-sessiondb logoff index index
The sessions that have been inactive the longest time are marked as idle (and are automatically logged off)
so that license capacity is not reached and new users can log in. If the session resumes at a later time, it is
removed from the inactive list.
You can find both the username and the index number (established by the order of the client images) in the
output of the show vpn-sessiondb anyconnect command. The following examples shows the username lee
and index number 1.
The following example terminates the session using the name option of the vpn-session-db logoff command:
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Feature History for AnyConnect Connections
hostname#
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CHAPTER 9
AnyConnect HostScan
The AnyConnect Posture Module provides the AnyConnect Secure Mobility Client the ability to identify the
operating system, anti-virus, anti-spyware, and firewall software installed on the host. The HostScan application
gathers this information. Posture assessment requires HostScan to be installed on the host.
Using the secure desktop manager tool in the Adaptive Security Device Manager (ASDM), you can create a
prelogin policy which evaluates the operating system, anti-virus, anti-spyware, and firewall software Host
Scan identifies. Based on the result of the prelogin policy’s evaluation, you can control which hosts are allowed
to create a remote access connection to the security appliance.
The HostScan support chart contains the product name and version information for the anti-virus, anti-spyware,
and firewall applications you use in your prelogin policies. We deliver HostScan and the HostScan support
chart, as well as other components, in the HostScan package.
Starting with AnyConnect Secure Mobility Client, release 3.0, HostScan is available separately from CSD.
This means you can deploy HostScan functionality without having to install CSD and you will be able to
update your HostScan support charts by upgrading the latest HostScan package.
• Prerequisites for HostScan, on page 229
• Licensing for HostScan, on page 230
• HostScan Packaging, on page 230
• Install or Upgrade HostScan, on page 230
• Enable or Disable HostScan, on page 231
• View the HostScan Version Enabled on the ASA, on page 232
• Uninstall HostScan, on page 232
• Assign AnyConnect Feature Modules to Group Policies, on page 233
• HostScan Related Documentation, on page 234
These AnyConnect features require that you install the posture module.
• SCEP authentication
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Licensing for HostScan
HostScan Packaging
You can load the HostScan package on to the ASA as a standalone package: hostscan-version.pkg. This file
contains the HostScan software as well as the HostScan library and support charts.
Note If you are attempting to upgrade to HostScan version 4.6.x or later from a 4.3.x version or earlier, you will
receive an error message due to the fact that all existing AV/AS/FW DAP policies and LUA script(s) that you
have previously established are incompatible with HostScan 4.6.x or greater.
There is a one time migration procedure that must be done to adapt your configuration. This procedure involves
leaving this dialog box to migrate your configuration to be comptaible with HostScan 4.4.x before saving this
configuration. Abort this procedure and refer to the AnyConnect HostScan 4.3.x to 4.6.x Migration Guide for
detailed instructions. Briefly, migration involves navigating to the ASDM DAP policy page to review and
manually deleting the incompatible AV/AS/FW attributes, and then reviewing and rewriting LUA scripts.
• Log on to the ASA and enter global configuration mode. In global configuration mode, the ASA displays
this prompt: hostname(config)#
• Upload the hostscan_version-k9.pkg file to the ASA.
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Enable or Disable HostScan
Procedure
hostname(config)# webvpn
Step 2 Specify the path to the package you want to designate as the HostScan image. You can specify a standalone
HostScan package or an AnyConnect Secure Mobility Client package as the HostScan package.
hostscan image path
Example:
Step 3 Enable the HostScan image you designated in the previous step.
Example:
ASAName(webvpn)#hostscan enable
Step 4 Save the running configuration to flash. After successfully saving the new configuration to flash memory,
you receive the message [OK].
Example:
Step 5
Procedure
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View the HostScan Version Enabled on the ASA
Step 2 Enable the standalone HostScan image if it has not been uninstalled from your ASA.
hostscan enable
no hostscan enable
Procedure
Uninstall HostScan
Uninstalling HostScan package removes it from view on the ASDM interface and prevents the ASA from
deploying it even if HostScan is enabled. Uninstalling HostScan does not delete the HostScan package from
the flash drive.
Procedure
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Assign AnyConnect Feature Modules to Group Policies
no hostscanenable
Step 3 Specify the path to the HostScan image you want to uninstall. A standalone HostScan package may have been
designated as the HostScan package.
no hostscan image path
Example:
Step 4 Save the running configuration to flash.After successfully saving the new configuration to flash memory, you
receive the message [OK].
write memory
Procedure
Step 2 Edit the new group policy. After entering the command, you receive the prompt for group policy configuration
mode, hostname(config-group-policy)#.
group-policy name attributes
Example:
hostname(config)# group-policy PostureModuleGroup attributes
Step 3 Enter group policy webvpn configuration mode. After you enter the command, the ASA returns this prompt:
hostname(config-group-webvpn)#
webvpn
Step 4 Configure the group policy to download AnyConnect feature modules for all users in the group.
anyconnect modules value AnyConnect Module Name
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HostScan Related Documentation
The value of the anyconnect module command can contain one or more of the following values. When
specifying more than one module, separate the values with a comma:
Example:
To remove one of the modules, re-send the command specifying only the module values you want to keep.
For example, this command removes the websecurity module:
See also the Cisco AnyConnect Secure Mobility Client Administrator Guide for more information about how
HostScan works with AnyConnect clients.
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CHAPTER 10
Easy VPN
This chapter describes how to configure any ASA as an Easy VPN Server, and the Cisco ASA with
FirePOWER- 5506-X, 5506W-X, 5506H-X, and 5508-X models as an Easy VPN Remote hardware client.
• About Easy VPN, on page 235
• Configure Easy VPN Remote, on page 238
• Configure Easy VPN Server, on page 241
• Feature History for Easy VPN, on page 242
Note The Cisco ASA 5506-X, 5506W-X, 5506H-X and 5508-X models support L3 switching not L2 switching.
Use an external switch when using Easy VPN Remote with multiple hosts or devices on the inside network.
A switch is not required if a single host is on the inside network of the ASA.
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About Easy VPN
The Easy VPN Server defaults to Client mode. To configure NEM mode use the nem enable command in
group policy configuration mode. Specifying one of the modes of operation on the Easy VPN Remote is
mandatory before establishing a tunnel because it does not have a default mode. On the Easy VPN Remote
use the vpnclient mode command to configure PAT or NEM.
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About Easy VPN
Note The Easy VPN Remote ASA configured for NEM mode supports automatic tunnel initiation. Automatic
initiation requires the configuration and storage of credentials used to set up the tunnel. Automatic tunnel
initiation is disabled if secure unit authentication is enabled.
An Easy VPN Remote in Network Extension Mode with multiple interfaces configured builds a tunnel for
locally encrypted traffic only from the interface with the highest security level.
The Cisco Easy VPN server intercepts HTTP traffic and redirects the user to a login page if the user name
and password is not configured, or SUA is disabled, or IUA is enabled. HTTP redirection is automatic and
does not require configuration on the Easy VPN Server.
Remote Management
The ASA operating as an Easy VPN Remote hardware client supports management access using SSH or
HTTPS, with or without additional IPsec encryption.
By default, management tunnels use IPsec encryption within SSH or HTTPS encryption. You can clear the
IPsec encryption layer allowing management access outside of the VPN tunnel using the vpnclient management
clear command. Clearing tunnel management merely removes the IPsec encryption level and does not affect
any other encryption, such as SSH or HTTPS, that exists on the connection.
For additional security, the Easy VPN Remote can require the IPsec encryption and limit administrative access
to specific hosts or networks on the corporate side using the vpnclient management tunnel command in
global configuration mode.
Use no vpnclient management to return to default remote management operation.
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Configure Easy VPN Remote
Note Do not configure a management tunnel on a ASA Easy VPN Remote if a NAT device is operating between
it and the Internet. In that configuration, clear remote management using the vpnclient management clear
command.
Regardless of your configuration, DHCP requests (including renew messages) should not flow over IPsec
tunnels. Even with a vpnclient management tunnel, DHCP traffic is prohibited.
Procedure
Example:
asa(config)#vpnclient server 10.10.10.15 10.10.10.30 192.168.10.10
Example:
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Configure Easy VPN Remote
Step 3 (Optional) If desired, configure the Easy VPN hardware client to use TCP-encapsulated IPsec.
vpnclient ipsec-over-tcp [port tcp_port]
The Easy VPN hardware client uses port 10000 if not specified.
If you configure an Easy VPN Remote to use TCP-encapsulated IPsec, enter the crypto ipsec df-bit clear-df
outside command to clear the Don't Fragment (DF) bit from the encapsulated header. A DF bit is a bit within
the IP header that determines whether the packet can be fragmented. This command lets the Easy VPN hardware
client send packets that are larger than the MTU size.
Example:
Configure the Easy VPN hardware client to use TCP-encapsulated IPsec, using the port 10501, and let it send
large packets over the outside interface:
hostname(config)# vpnclient ipsec-over-tcp port 10501
hostname(config)# crypto ipsec df-bit clear-df outside
Step 4 Identify the tunnel group, configured on the Easy VPN Server, using one of the following methods:
• Specify the Easy VPN Server group policy name and password (pre-shared key).
vpnclient vpngroup group_name password preshared_key
• group_name—name of the VPN tunnel group configured on the Easy VPN server. You must
configure this tunnel group on the server before establishing a connection.
• preshared_key—the IKE pre-shared key used for authentication on the Easy VPN Server.
For example, enter the following command to identify the VPN tunnel group named TestGroup1 and
the IKE pre-shared key my_key123.
hostname(config)# vpnclient vpngroup TestGroup1 password my_key123
hostname(config)#
• Specify a per-configured trust point to select and authenticate the group policy.
vpnclient trustpoint trustpoint_name [chain]
• trustpoint_name—names the trustpoint identifying the RSA certificate to use for authentication.
• chain(Optional)—sends the entire certificate chain.
For example, enter the following command to specify the identity certificate named central and send the
entire certificate chain:
hostname(config)# crypto ca trustpoint central
hostname(config)# vpnclient trustpoint central chain
hostname(config)#
Step 5 If NEM and split-tunneling are configured in the group policy, configure the VPN tunnel to autoconnect.
vpnclient nem-st-autoconnect
Step 6 (Optional) If Individual User Authentication (IAU) and IP Phone Bypass is configured in the group policy
on the Easy VPN Server, exempt devices such as Cisco IP phones, wireless access points, and printers, from
authentication since they are incapable of authenticating.
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Configure Easy VPN Remote
Example:
Cisco IP phones have the Manufacturer ID 00036b, so the following command exempts any Cisco IP phone,
including Cisco IP phones, you might add in the future:
hostname(config)# vpnclient mac-exempt 0003.6b00.0000 ffff.ff00.0000
hostname(config)#
Note Individual User Authentication and IP Phone Bypass must be configured on the Easy VPN Server
group policy as shown:
hostname(config-group-policy)#user-authentication enable
hostname(config-group-policy)#ip-phone-bypass enable
Example:
Enter the following command to automate the creation of an IPsec tunnel to provide management access to
the host with IP address 192.168.10.10:
hostname(config)# vpnclient management tunnel 192.198.10.10 255.255.255.0
Note Do not configure a management tunnel on a ASA Easy VPN Remote if a NAT device is operating
between it and the Internet. In that configuration, clear remote management using the vpnclient
management clear command.
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Configure Easy VPN Server
The server address(es), mode, and tunnel group specification must be configured before you can enable Easy
VPN Remote.
Step 10 (Optional) Manually connect the Easy VPN tunnel if your configuration requires this.
vpnclient connect
Procedure
Step 1 Configure the Easy VPN Server for IPsec IKEv1 support. See Connection Profiles, Group Policies, and Users,
on page 77.
Step 2 Set the specific Easy VPN Server atttributes. See Configure Attributes for VPN Hardware Clients, on page
143.
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Feature History for Easy VPN
Cisco Easy VPN client on the ASA 9.5(1) This release supports Cisco Easy
5506-X, 5506W-X, 5506H-X, and VPN on the ASA 5506-X series
5508-X and for the ASA 5508-X. The ASA
acts as a VPN hardware client when
connecting to the VPN headend.
Any devices (computers, printers,
and so on) behind the ASA on the
Easy VPN port can communicate
over the VPN; they do not have to
run VPN clients individually. Note
that only one ASA interface can act
as the Easy VPN port; to connect
multiple devices to that port, you
need to place a Layer 2 switch on
the port, and then connect your
devices to the switch.
We introduced the following
commands: vpnclient enable,
vpnclient server, vpnclient mode,
vpnclient username, vpnclient
ipsec-over-tcp, vpnclient
management, vpnclient
vpngroup, vpnclient trustpoint,
vpnclient nem-st-autoconnect,
vpnclient mac-exempt
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CHAPTER 11
Configure an External AAA Server for VPN
• About External AAA Servers, on page 243
• Guidelines For Using External AAA Servers, on page 244
• Configure LDAP Authorization for VPN, on page 244
• Active Directory/LDAP VPN Remote Access Authorization Examples, on page 246
If the ASA receives attributes from all sources, the attributes are evaluated, merged, and applied to the user
policy. If there are conflicts between attributes, the DAP attributes take precedence.
The ASA applies attributes in the following order:
1. DAP attributes on the ASA—Introduced in Version 8.0(2), these attributes take precedence over all others.
If you set a bookmark or URL list in DAP, it overrides a bookmark or URL list set in the group policy.
2. User attributes on the AAA server—The server returns these attributes after successful user authentication
and/or authorization. Do not confuse these with attributes that are set for individual users in the local AAA
database on the ASA (User Accounts in ASDM).
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Guidelines For Using External AAA Servers
3. Group policy configured on the ASA—If a RADIUS server returns the value of the RADIUS CLASS
attribute IETF-Class-25 (OU=group-policy) for the user, the ASA places the user in the group policy of
the same name and enforces any attributes in the group policy that are not returned by the server.
For LDAP servers, any attribute name can be used to set the group policy for the session. The LDAP
attribute map that you configure on the ASA maps the LDAP attribute to the Cisco attribute
IETF-Radius-Class.
4. Group policy assigned by the Connection Profile (called tunnel-group in the CLI)—The Connection
Profile has the preliminary settings for the connection, and includes a default group policy applied to the
user before authentication. All users connecting to the ASA initially belong to this group, which provides
any attributes that are missing from the DAP, user attributes returned by the server, or the group policy
assigned to the user.
5. Default group policy assigned by the ASA (DfltGrpPolicy)—System default attributes provide any values
that are missing from the DAP, user attributes, group policy, or connection profile.
Procedure
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Configure LDAP Authorization for VPN
tunnel-group groupname
Example:
Step 4 Assigns a new tunnel group to a previously created AAA server group for authorization.
authorization-server-group group-tag
Example:
Example
The following example shows commands for enabling user authorization with LDAP. The example
then creates an IPsec remote access tunnel group named RAVPN and assigns that new tunnel group
to the previously created LDAP AAA server group for authorization:
After you complete this configuration work, you can then configure additional LDAP authorization
parameters such as a directory password, a starting point for searching a directory, and the scope of
a directory search by entering the following commands:
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Active Directory/LDAP VPN Remote Access Authorization Examples
Procedure
Step 1 Right-click the username, open the Properties dialog box then the General tab and enter banner text in the
Office field, which uses the AD/LDAP attribute physicalDeliveryOfficeName.
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Place LDAP Users in a Specific Group Policy
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Place LDAP Users in a Specific Group Policy
To place an LDAP user into a specific group policy use the Department field of the Organization tab to enter
the name of the group policy. Then create an attribute map, and map Department to the Cisco attribute
IETF-Radius-Class.
During authentication, the ASA retrieves the value of Department from the server, maps the value to the
IETF-Radius-Class, and places User1 in the group policy.
Procedure
Step 1 Right-click the username, open the Properties dialog box then the Organization tab and enter Group-Policy-1
in the Department field.
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Enforce Static IP Address Assignment for AnyConnect Tunnels
Step 4 Add the group-policy, Group-policy-1 as entered in the Department field on the server, on the ASA and
configure the required policy attributes that will be assigned to the user:
Step 5 Establish the VPN connection as the user would, and verify that the session inherits the attributes from
Group-Policy1 (and any other applicable attributes from the default group-policy).
Step 6 Monitor the communication between the ASA and the server by enabling the debug ldap 255 command from
privileged EXEC mode. The following is sample output from this command, which has been edited to provide
the key messages:
Procedure
Step 1 Right-click the username, open the Properties dialog box then the Dial-in tab, check the Assign Static IP
Address check box, and enter an IP address of 10.1.1.2.
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Enforce Static IP Address Assignment for AnyConnect Tunnels
Step 4 Verify that the vpn-address-assignment command is configured to specify AAA by viewing this part of the
configuration:
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Enforce Dial-in Allow or Deny Access
no vpn-addr-assign dhcp
vpn-addr-assign local
hostname(config)#
Step 5 Establish a connection to the ASA with the AnyConnect client. Observe that the user receives the IP address
configured on the server and mapped to the ASA.
Step 6 Use the show vpn-sessiondb svc command to view the session details and verify the address assigned:
1 PPTP
2 L2TP
4 IPsec (IKEv1)
8 L2TP/IPsec
16 Clientless SSL
64 IPsec (IKEv2)
1
(1) IPsec and L2TP over IPsec are not supported simultaneously. Therefore, the values 4 and 8 are
mutually exclusive.
2
(2) See note 1.
Use this attribute to create an Allow Access (TRUE) or a Deny Access (FALSE) condition for the protocols,
and enforce the method for which the user is allowed access.
See Tech Note ASA/PIX: Mapping VPN Clients to VPN Group Policies Through LDAP Configuration
Example for another example of enforcing dial-in allow access or deny access.
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Enforce Dial-in Allow or Deny Access
Procedure
Step 1 Right-click the username, open the Properties dialog box then the Dial-in tab, and click the Allow Access
radio button.
Note If you choose the Control access through the Remote Access Policy option, then a value is not
returned from the server, and the permissions that are enforced are based on the internal group policy
settings of the ASA.
Step 2 Create an attribute map to allow both an IPsec and AnyConnect connection, but deny a clientless SSL
connection.
a) Create the map tunneling_protocols:
b) Map the AD attribute msNPAllowDialin used by the Allow Access setting to the Cisco attribute
Tunneling-Protocols:
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Enforce Logon Hours and Time-of-Day Rules
Procedure
Step 1 Select the user, right-click Properties, and open the General tab:
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Enforce Logon Hours and Time-of-Day Rules
Step 4 Configure time ranges for each value allowed on the server.
Configure Partner access hours from 9am to 5pm Monday through Friday:
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PA R T II
Clientless SSL VPN
• Clientless SSL VPN Overview, on page 257
• Basic Clientless SSL VPN Configuration, on page 261
• Advanced Clientless SSL VPN Configuration, on page 289
• Policy Groups, on page 303
• Clientless SSL VPN Remote Users, on page 337
• Clientless SSL VPN Users, on page 347
• Clientless SSL VPN with Mobile Devices, on page 373
• Customizing Clientless SSL VPN, on page 375
• Clientless SSL VPN Troubleshooting, on page 393
CHAPTER 12
Clientless SSL VPN Overview
• Introduction to Clientless SSL VPN, on page 257
• Prerequisites for Clientless SSL VPN, on page 258
• Guidelines and Limitations for Clientless SSL VPN, on page 258
• Licensing for Clientless SSL VPN, on page 259
Note Security contexts (also called firewall multimode) and Active/Active stateful failover are not supported when
Clientless SSL VPN is enabled.
Clientless SSL VPN creates a secure, remote-access VPN tunnel to an ASA using a web browser without
requiring a software or hardware client. It provides secure and easy access to a broad range of web resources
and both web-enabled and legacy applications from almost any device that can connect to the Internet via
HTTP. They include:
• Internal websites.
• Web-enabled applications.
• NT/Active Directory file shares.
• Microsoft Outlook Web Access Exchange Server 2000, 2003, 2007, and 2013.
• Microsoft Web App to Exchange Server 2010 in 8.4(2) and later.
• Application Access (smart tunnel or port forwarding access to other TCP-based applications).
Clientless SSL VPN uses Secure Sockets Layer Protocol and its successor, Transport Layer Security
(SSL/TLS1) to provide the secure connection between remote users and specific, supported internal resources
that you configure as an internal server. The ASA recognizes connections that must be proxied, and the HTTP
server interacts with the authentication subsystem to authenticate users.
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Prerequisites for Clientless SSL VPN
The network administrator provides access to resources by users of Clientless SSL VPN sessions on a group
basis. Users have no direct access to resources on the internal network.
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Licensing for Clientless SSL VPN
is assigned and is reported to the RADIUS server in an interim-update accounting message. You can
expect similar RADIUS behavior when a Layer3 VPN tunnel is established using the weblaunch feature.
In this case, the accounting start message is sent without a framed IP address after a user is authenticated
but before the Layer3 tunnel is established. This start message is followed by an interim update message
once the Layer3 tunnel is established.
When you have several group policies configured for the clientless portal, they are displayed in a drop-down
on the logon page. When the first group policy in the list requires a certificate, then the user must have a
matching certificate. If some of your group policies do not use certificates, you must configure the list to
display a non-certificate policy first. Alternatively, you may want to create a dummy group policy with the
name “0-Select-a-group.”
Tip You can control which policy is displayed first by naming your group polices alphabetically, or prefix them
with numbers. For example, 1-AAA, 2-Certificate.
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Licensing for Clientless SSL VPN
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CHAPTER 13
Basic Clientless SSL VPN Configuration
• Rewrite Each URL, on page 261
• Switch Off URL Entry on the Portal Page, on page 262
• Trusted Certificate Pools, on page 262
• Configure Browser Access to Plug-ins, on page 264
• Configure Port Forwarding, on page 270
• Configure File Access, on page 275
• Ensure Clock Accuracy for SharePoint Access, on page 278
• Virtual Desktop Infrastructure (VDI), on page 278
• Use SSL to Access Internal Servers, on page 281
• Configure Browser Access to Client-Server Plug-ins, on page 285
Figure 7: Same URL Rewritten by Security Appliance and Displayed in Browser Window
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Switch Off URL Entry on the Portal Page
Procedure
Note ASA trustpools are similar to but not identical to Cisco IOS trustpools.
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Configure Auto Import of Trustpool Certificates
You can also enable auto import with a custom URL with the following command:
ciscoasa(config-ca-trustpool)# auto-import url http://www.thawte.com
To give you more flexibility to set downloads during off peak hours or other convenient times, enter the
following command which enables the import with a custom time:
ciscoasa(config-ca-trustpool)# auto-import time 23:23:23
Setting the automatic import with both a custom URL and custom time requires the following command:
ciscoasa(config-ca-trustpool)# auto-import time 23:23:23 url http://www.thawte.com
Trustpool Policy
Policy Overrides:
None configured
Clear CA Trustpool
To reset the trustpool policy to its default state, use the following command:
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Edit the Policy of the Trusted Certificate Pool
Since the automatic import of trustpoint certificates is turned off by default, using this command disables the
feature.
Step 1 Revocation Check—Configure whether to check the certificates in the pool for revocation, and then choose
whether to use CLR or OCSP and whether to make the certificate invalid if checking for revocation fails.
Step 2 Certificate Matching Rules—Select certificate maps to exempt from revocation or expiration checks. A
certificate map links certificates to AnyConnect or clientless SSL connection profiles (also known as tunnel
groups).
Step 3 CRL Options—Decide how often to refresh the CRL cache, between 1 and 1440 minutes (1140 minutes is
24 hours).
Step 4 Automatic Import—Cisco periodically updates the "default" list of trusted CAs. If you check Enable Automatic
Import, and keep the default settings, the ASA checks for an updated list of trusted CAs on the Cisco site
every 24 hours. If the list has changed, the ASA downloads and imports the new default trusted CA list.
The following shows the changes to the main menu and Address field of the portal page when you add the
plug-ins described in the following sections.
Table 12: Effects of Plug-ins on the Clientless SSL VPN Portal Page
Plug-in Main Menu Option Added to Portal Address Field Option Added to
Page Portal Page
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Prerequisites with Plug-Ins
Plug-in Main Menu Option Added to Portal Address Field Option Added to
Page Portal Page
Note The remote desktop protocol plug-in does not support load balancing with a session broker. Because of the
way the protocol handles the redirect from the session broker, the connection fails. If a session broker is not
used, the plug-in works.
• The plug-ins support single sign-on (SSO). They use the same credentials entered to open the Clientless
SSL VPN session. Because the plug-ins do not support macro substitution, you do not have the options
to perform SSO on different fields such as the internal domain password or on an attribute on a RADIUS
or LDAP server.
• A stateful failover does not retain sessions established using plug-ins. Users must reconnect following
a failover.
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Prepare the Security Appliance for a Plug-in
• If you use stateless failover instead of stateful failover, clientless features such as bookmarks,
customization, and dynamic access-policies are not synchronized between the failover ASA pairs. In the
event of a failover, these features do not work.
Procedure
Step 2 Install an SSL certificate onto the ASA interface and provide a fully-qualified domain name (FQDN) for
remote user connection.
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Install Plug-ins Redistributed by Cisco
* Consult the plug-in documentation for information on deployment configuration and restrictions.
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Provide Access to a Citrix XenApp Server
These plug-ins are available on the Cisco Adaptive Security Appliance Software Download site.
Note The ASA does not retain the import webvpn plug-in protocol command in the configuration. Instead, it
loads the contents of the csco-config/97/plugin directory automatically. A secondary ASA obtains the
plug-ins from the primary ASA.
Procedure
Step 1 Install the plug-in onto the flash device of the ASA.
import webvpn plug-in protocol [ rdp | rdp2 | [ ssh | telnet ] | vnc] URL
Note Do not enter this command once for SSH and once for Telnet. When typing ssh,telnet , do not insert
a space. This provides plug-in access to both Secure Shell and Telnet services.
Example:
The following example shows entering the hostname or address of the TFTP or FTP server and the path to
the plug-in, where URL is the remote path to the plug-in .jar file.
hostname# import webvpn plug-in protocol ssh,telnet
tftp://local_tftp_server/plugins/ssh-plugin.jar
Accessing
tftp://local_tftp_server/plugins/ssh-plugin.jar...!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Writing file disk0:/csco_config/97/plugin/ssh...
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
238510 bytes copied in 3.650 secs (79503 bytes/sec)
Step 2 (Optional) Switch off and remove Clientless SSL VPN support for a plug-in, as well as removing it from the
flash drive of the ASA.
revert webvpn plug-in protocol protocol
Example:
hostname# revert webvpn plug-in protocol rdp
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Create and Install the Citrix Plug-in
Procedure
Step 1 Download the ica-plugin.zip file from the Cisco Software Download website.
This file contains files that Cisco customized for use with the Citrix plug-in.
Step 2 Download the Citrix Java client from the Citrix site.
In the download area of the Citrix website, choose Citrix Receiver, and Receiver for Other Platforms, and
click Find. Click the Receiver for Java hyperlink and download the archive.
Step 3 Extract the following files from the archive, and then add them to the ica-plugin.zip file:
• JICA-configN.jar
• JICAEngN.jar
Step 4 Ensure the EULA included with the Citrix Java client grants you the rights and permissions to deploy the
client on your Web servers.
Step 5 Install the plug-in by using ASDM, or entering the following CLI command in privileged EXEC mode:
import webvpn plug-in protocol ica URL
URL is the hostname or IP address and path to the ica-plugin.zip file.
Note Adding a bookmark is required to provide SSO support for Citrix sessions. We recommend that
you use URL parameters in the bookmark the provide convenient viewing, for example:
ica://10.56.1.114/?DesiredColor=4&DesiredHRes=1024&DesiredVRes=768
Step 6 Establish an SSL VPN clientless session and click the bookmark or enter the URL for the Citrix server.
Use the Client for Java Administrator’s Guide as needed.
Step 1 List the Java-based client applications available to users of Clientless SSL VPN.
Example:
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Configure Port Forwarding
Other TCP-based applications may also work, but we have not tested them. Protocols that use UDP do not
work.
Port forwarding is the legacy technology for supporting TCP-based applications over a Clientless SSL VPN
connection. You may choose to use port forwarding because you have built earlier configurations that support
this technology.
Consider the following alternatives to port forwarding:
• Smart tunnel access offers the following advantages to users:
• Smart tunnel offers better performance than plug-ins.
• Unlike port forwarding, smart tunnel simplifies the user experience by not requiring the user
connection of the local application to the local port.
• Unlike port forwarding, smart tunnel does not require users to have administrator privileges.
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Prerequisites for Port Forwarding
• Unlike port forwarding and smart tunnel access, a plug-in does not require the client application to be
installed on the remote computer.
When configuring port forwarding on the ASA, you specify the port the application uses. When configuring
smart tunnel access, you specify the name of the executable file or its path.
For details, go to the Safari, Mac OS X 10.5.3: Changes in client certificate authentication.
• Users of Microsoft Windows Vista or later who use port forwarding or smart tunnels must add the URL
of the ASA to the Trusted Site zone. To access the Trusted Site zone, they must start Internet Explorer
and choose the Tools > Internet Options > Security tab. Vista (or later) users can also switch off
Protected Mode to facilitate smart tunnel access; however, we recommend against this method because
it increases the computer’s vulnerability to attack.
• The port forwarding applet displays the local port and the remote port as the same when the local IP
address 127.0.0.1 is being used and cannot be updated by the Clientless SSL VPN connection from the
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Configure DNS for Port Forwarding
ASA. As a result, the ASA creates new IP addresses 127.0.0.2, 127.0.0.3, and so on for local proxy IDs.
Because you can modify the hosts file and use different loopbacks, the remote port is used as the local
port in the applet. To connect, you can use Telnet with the hostname, without specifying the port. The
correct local IP addresses are available in the local hosts file.
Procedure
Step 1 Enter the dns server-group mode and configure a DNS server group named example.com.
Example:
hostname(config)# dns server-group example.com
Step 2 Specify the domain name. The default domain-name setting is DefaultDNS.
Example:
hostname(config-dns-server-group)# domain-name example.com
Step 6 Specify the domain name that the tunnel groups will use. By default, the security appliance assigns the default
Clientless SSL VPN group as the default tunnel group for clientless connections. Follow this instruction if
the ASA uses that tunnel group to assign settings to the clientless connections. Otherwise, follow this step for
each tunnel configured for clientless connections.
Example:
asa2(config-dns-server-group)# exit
asa2(config)# tunnel-group DefaultWEBVPNGroup webvpn-attributes
asa2(config-tunnel-webvpn)# dns-group example.com
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Make Applications Eligible for Port Forwarding
Procedure
Step 1 Display the port forwarding list entries already present in the ASA configuration.
show run webvpn port-forward
Note These options are mutually exclusive for each group policy and username. Use only one.
Procedure
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Automate Port Forwarding
Step 3 (Optional) Remove a port-forward command from the group policy or username configuration, which then
inherits the [no] port-forward command from the default group policy. The keywords following the no
port-forward command are optional; however, they restrict the removal to the named port-forward command.
no port-forward [auto-start <list name> | enable <list name> | disable]
Procedure
Step 4 Display the port forwarding list entries present in the ASA configuration.
show run webvpn port-forward
Step 5 (Optional) Remove the port-forward command from the group policy or username and reverts to the default.
no port-forward
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Configure File Access
Procedure
Step 3 (Optional) Remove the port-forward command from the group policy or username and revert to the default.
no port-forward
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CIFS File Access Requirement and Limitation
The ASA uses a master browser, WINS server, or DNS server, typically on the same network as the ASA or
reachable from that network, to query the network for a list of servers when the remote user clicks Browse
Networks in the menu of the portal page or on the toolbar displayed during the Clientless SSL VPN session.
The master browser or DNS server provides the CIFS/FTP client on the ASA with a list of the resources on
the network, which Clientless SSL VPN serves to the remote user.
Note Before configuring file access, you must configure the shares on the servers for user access.
Note The procedure describes how to specify the master browser and WINS servers. As an alternative, you can use
ASDM to configure URL lists and entries that provide access to file shares.
Adding a share in ASDM does not require a master browser or a WINS server. However, it does not provide
support for the Browse Networks link. You can use a hostname or an IP address to refer to ServerA when
entering the nbns-server command. If you use a hostname, the ASA requires a DNS server to resolve it to an
IP address.
Procedure
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Add Support for File Access
Step 3 Browse a network or domain for each NetBIOS Name Server (NBNS).
nbns-server {IPaddress | hostname} [master] [timeout timeout] [retry retries]
• master is the computer designated as the master browser. The master browser maintains the list of
computers and shared resources. Any NBNS server you identify with this command without entering
the master portion of the command must be a Windows Internet Naming Server (WINS). Specify the
master browser first, then specify the WINS servers. You can specify up to three servers, including the
master browser, for a connection profile.
• timeout is the number of seconds the ASA waits before sending the query again, to the same server if it
is the only one, or another server if there are more than one. The default timeout is 2 seconds; the range
is 1 to 30 seconds.
• retries is the number of times to retry queries to the NBNS server. The ASA recycles through the list of
servers this number of times before sending an error message. The default value is 2; the range is 1
through 10.
Example:
hostname(config-tunnel-webvpn)# nbns-server 192.168.1.20 master
hostname(config-tunnel-webvpn)# nbns-server 192.168.1.41
hostname(config-tunnel-webvpn)# nbns-server 192.168.1.47
Step 4 Display the NBNS servers already present in the connection profile configuration.
show tunnel-group webvpn-attributes
Step 5 (Optional) Specify the character set to encode in Clientless SSL VPN portal pages delivered to remote users.
By default, the encoding type set on the remote browser determines the character set for Clientless SSL VPN
portal pages, so you need to set the character encoding only if it is necessary to ensure proper encoding on
the browser.
character-encoding charset
charset is a string consisting of up to 40 characters, and is equal to one of the valid character sets identified
in http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets. You can use either the name or the alias of a character set
listed on that page. Examples include iso-8859-1, shift_jis, and ibm850.
Note The character-encoding and file-encoding values do not exclude the font family to be used by the
browser. You need to complement the setting of one these values with the page style command in
webvpn customization command mode to replace the font family if you are using Japanese Shift_JIS
character encoding, as shown in the following example, or enter the no page style command in
webvpn customization command mode to remove the font family.
Example:
The following example sets the character-encoding attribute to support Japanese Shift_JIS characters, removes
the font family, and retains the default background color.
hostname(config)# webvpn
hostname(config-webvpn)# character-encoding shift_jis
hostname(config-webvpn)# customization DfltCustomization
hostname(config-webvpn-custom)# page style background-color:white
Step 6 (Optional) Specify the encoding for Clientless SSL VPN portal pages from specific CIFS servers. Thus, you
can use different file-encoding values for CIFS servers that require different character encodings.
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Ensure Clock Accuracy for SharePoint Access
VDI servers can also be accessed through bookmarks on the Clientless Portal, like other server applications.
Limitations to VDI
• Authentication using certificates or Smart Cards is not supported for auto sign-on, since these forms of
authentication do not allow the ASA in the middle.
• The XML service must be installed and configured on the XenApp and XenDesktop servers.
• Client certificate verifications, double Auth, internal passwords and CSD (all of CSD, not just Vault)
are not supported when standalone mobile clients are used.
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Supported Mobile Devices for Citrix
• An RSA SecureID token value, when the RSA server is configured. RSA support includes next
token for an invalid entry, and also for entering a new PIN for an initial or expired PIN.
Limitations of Citrix
Certificate Limitations
• Certificate/Smart Card authentication is not supported as means of auto sign-on.
• Client certificate verifications and CSD are not supported
• Md5 signature in the certificates are not working because of security issue, which is a known problem
on iOS: http://support.citrix.com/article/CTX132798
• SHA2 signature is not supported except for Windows, as described on the Citrix website:
http://www.citrix.com/
• A key size >1024 is not supported
Other Limitations
• HTTP redirect is not supported; the Citrix Receiver application does not work with redirects.
• XML service must be installed and configured on the XenApp and XenDesktop servers.
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Configure the ASA to Proxy a Citrix Server
Procedure
Step 1 A mobile user opens Citrix Receiver and connects to ASA's URL.
Step 2 The user provides credentials for the XenApp server and the VPN credentials on the Citrix logon screen.
Step 3 For each subsequent connection to the Citrix server, the user only needs to enter the VPN credentials.
Using the ASA as a proxy for XenApp and XenDesktop removes the requirement for a Citrix Access Gateway.
XenApp server info is logged on the ASA, and displays in ASDM.
Configure the Citrix server's address and logon credentials, and assign that VDI server to a Group Policy or
username. If both username and group-policy are configured, username settings override group-policy settings.
What to do next
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JMM2RzppaG8 - This video describes the advantages of using the ASA
as a Citrix proxy.
If both username and group policy are configured, username settings take precedence over group policy. Enter
the following:
configure terminal
group-policy DfltGrpPolicy attributes
webvpn
vdi type <citrix> url <url> domain <domain> username <username> password
<password>
configure terminal
username <username> attributes
webvpn
vdi type <citrix> url <url> domain <domain> username <username> password
<password>]
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• username—Username for logging into the virtualization infrastructure server. This value can be a clientless
macro.
• password—Password for logging into the virtualization infrastructure server. This value can be a clientless
macro.
• domain—Domain for logging into the virtualization infrastructure server. This value can be a clientless
macro.
Procedure
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Step 2 Enable Clientless SSL VPN sessions on the interface called outside.
Enter enable interface-name.
Example
hostname(config)# webvpn
hostname(config-webvpn)# enable outside
What to do next
To see the current configuration, use the show running-config webvpn.
To clear the current configuration, use the clear configure webvpn.
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Configure Support for Proxy Servers
Procedure
Step 6 (Optional) Exclude URLs from those that can be sent to the proxy server.
exclude
Step 7 Provide the hostname or IP address for the external proxy server.
host
Step 8 Download the proxy autoconfiguration file to the ASA using a JavaScript function which identifies a proxy
for each URL.
pac
Step 9 (Optional) (Only available if you specify a username) Accompanies each proxy request with a password to
provide basic, proxy authentication.
password
Step 10 Send the password to the proxy server with each HTTP or HTTPS request.
password
Step 11 (Optional) Provide the port number used by the proxy server. The default HTTP port is 80. The default HTTPS
port is 443. The ASA uses each of these ports if you do not specify an alternative value. The range is 1-65535.
port
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Step 12 If you entered exclude, enter a URL or a comma-delimited list of several URLs to exclude from those that
can be sent to the proxy server. The string does not have a character limit, but the entire command cannot
exceed 512 characters. You can specify literal URLs or use the following wildcards:
• * to match any string, including slashes (/) and periods (.). You must accompany this wildcard with an
alphanumeric string.
• ? to match any single character, including slashes and periods.
• [x-y] to match any single character in the range of x and y, where x represents one character and y
represents another character in the ANSI character set.
• [!x-y] to match any single character that is not in the range.
Step 13 If you entered http-proxy pac, follow it with http:// and type the URL of the proxy autoconfiguration file.
(If you omit the http:// portion, the CLI ignores the command.)
Step 14 (Optional) Accompany each HTTP proxy request with a username for basic, proxy authentication. Only the
http-proxyhost command supports this keyword.
username
Step 15 Send the username to the proxy server with each HTTP or HTTPS request.
username
Step 16 Show how to configure use of an HTTP proxy server with an IP address of 209.165. 201.1 using the default
port, sending a username and password with each HTTP request.
Example:
hostname(config-webvpn)# http-proxy 209.165.201.1 user jsmith password
mysecretdonttell
Step 17 Show the same command, except when the ASA receives the specific URL www.example.com in an HTTP
request, it resolves the request instead of passing it on to the proxy server.
Example:
http-proxy 209.165.201.1 exclude www.example.com
hostname(config-webvpn)#
username jsmith password mysecretdonttell
Step 18 Show how to specify a URL to serve a proxy autoconfiguration file to the browser.
Example:
hostname(config-webvpn)# http-proxy pac http://www.example.com/pac
The ASA Clientless SSL VPN configuration supports only one http-proxy and one https-proxy command
each. For example, if one instance of the http-proxy command is already present in the running configuration
and you enter another, the CLI overwrites the previous instance.
Note Proxy NTLM authentication is not supported in http-proxy. Only proxy without authentication and
basic authentication is supported.
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Configure SSL/TLS Encryption Protocols
The following table shows the changes to the main menu and address field of the portal page when you add
the plug-ins described in the following sections.
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About Installing Browser Plug-ins
Table 14: Effects of Plug-ins on the Clientless SSL VPN Portal Page
Plug-in Main Menu Option Added to Portal Address Field Option Added to
Page Portal Page
Telnet telnet://
Note A secondary ASA obtains the plug-ins from the primary ASA.
When the user in a Clientless SSL VPN session clicks the associated menu option on the portal page, the
portal page displays a window to the interface and displays a help pane. The user can choose the protocol
displayed in the drop-down list and enter the URL in the Address field to establish a connection.
Note Some Java plug-ins may report a status of connected or online even when a session to the destination service
is not set up. The open-source plug-in reports the status, not the ASA.
Note The remote desktop protocol plug-in does not support load balancing with a
session broker. Because of the way the protocol handles the redirect from the
session broker, the connection fails. If a session broker is not used, the plug-in
works.
• The plug-ins support single sign-on (SSO). They use the same credentials entered to open the Clientless
SSL VPN session. Because the plug-ins do not support macro substitution, you do not have the options
to perform SSO on different fields such as the internal domain password or on an attribute on a RADIUS
or LDAP server.
• To configure SSO support for a plug-in, you install the plug-in, add a bookmark entry to display a link
to the server, and specify SSO support when adding the bookmark.
• The minimum access rights required for remote use belong to the guest privilege mode.
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Requirements for Installing Browser Plug-ins
Procedure
Step 1 Right-click My Computer to access the System Properties, and choose the Advanced tab.
Step 2 On the Advanced tab, choose the environment variables button.
Step 3 In the new user variable dialog box, enter the RF_DEBUG variable.
Step 4 Verify the new Environment Variable in the user variables section.
Step 5 If you used the client computer with versions of Clientless SSL VPN before version 8.3, you must remove
the old Cisco Portforwarder Control. Go to the C:/WINDOWS/Downloaded Program Files directory, right-click
portforwarder control, and choose Remove.
Step 6 Clear all of the Internet Explorer browser cache.
Step 7 Launch your Clientless SSL VPN session and establish an RDP session with the RDP ActiveX Plug-in.
You can now observe events in the Windows Application Event viewer.
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Configure the ASA to Use the New HTML File
Procedure
Step 3 Change the full customization mode tag in the file to enable.
Example:
This example supplies the URL of the login file stored in the ASA memory.
<full-customization>
<mode>enable</mode>
<url>/+CSCOU+/login.inc</url>
</full-customization>
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CHAPTER 14
Advanced Clientless SSL VPN Configuration
• Microsoft Kerberos Constrained Delegation Solution, on page 289
• Configure Application Profile Customization Framework, on page 295
• Encoding, on page 299
• Use Email over Clientless SSL VPN, on page 301
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Authentication Flow with KCD
The Kerberos security system is a network authentication protocol used to authenticate entities (users,
computers, or applications) and protect network transmissions by scrambling the data so that only the device
that the information was intended for can decrypt it. You can configure KCD to provide Clientless SSL VPN
users with SSO access to any Web services protected by Kerberos. Examples of such Web services or
applications include Outlook Web Access (OWA), Sharepoint, and Internet Information Server (IIS).
Two extensions to the Kerberos protocol were implemented: protocol transition and constrained delegation.
These extensions allow the Clientless SSL VPN remote access users to access Kerberos-authenticated
applications in the private network.
Protocol transition provides you with increased flexibility and security by supporting different authentication
mechanisms at the user authentication level and by switching to the Kerberos protocol for security features
(such as mutual authentication and constrained delegation) in subsequent application layers. Constrained
delegation provides a way for domain administrators to specify and enforce application trust boundaries by
limiting where application services can act on a user’s behalf. This flexibility improves application security
designs by reducing the chance of compromise by an untrusted service.
For more information on constrained delegation, see RFC 1510 via the IETF website (http://www.ietf.org).
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Authentication Flow with KCD
Note A clientless user session is authenticated by the ASA using the authentication mechanism configured for the
user. (In the case of smartcard credentials, ASA performs LDAP authorization with the userPrincipalName
from the digital certificate against the Windows Active Directory).
1. After successful authentication, the user logs in to the ASA clientless portal page. The user accesses a
Web service by entering a URL in the portal page or by clicking on the bookmark. If the Web service
requires authentication, the server challenges ASA for credentials and sends a list of authentication methods
supported by the server.
Note KCD for Clientless SSL VPN is supported for all authentication methods (RADIUS, RSA/SDI, LDAP, digital
certificates, and so on). Refer to the AAA Support table at
http://www.cisco.com/en/US/docs/security/asa/asa84/configuration/guide/access_aaa.html#wp1069492.
2. Based on the HTTP headers in the challenge, ASA determines whether the server requires Kerberos
authentication. (This is part of the SPNEGO mechanism.) If connecting to a backend server requires
Kerberos authentication, the ASA requests a service ticket for itself on behalf of the user from the key
distribution center.
3. The key distribution center returns the requested tickets to the ASA. Even though these tickets are passed
to the ASA, they contain the user’s authorization data.ASA requests a service ticket from the KCD for
the specific service that the user wants to access.
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Note Steps 1 to 3 comprise protocol transition. After these steps, any user who authenticates to ASA using a
non-Kerberos authentication protocol is transparently authenticated to the key distribution center using
Kerberos.
4. ASA requests a service ticket from the key distribution center for the specific service that the user wants
to access.
5. The key distribution center returns a service ticket for the specific service to the ASA.
6. ASA uses the service ticket to request access to the Web service.
7. The Web server authenticates the Kerberos service ticket and grants access to the service. The appropriate
error message is displayed and requires acknowledgment if there is an authentication failure. If the Kerberos
authentication fails, the expected behavior is to fall back to basic authentication.
Procedure
Step 1 Join the Active Directory domain. A 10.1.1.10 domain controller (which is reachable inside the interface).
ntp hostname
Example:
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Configure KCD
hostname(config)# webvpn
hostname(config-webvpn)# kcd-server KerberosGroup username dcuser password dcuser123!
hostname(config)#
Configure KCD
To have the ASA join a Windows Active Directory domain and return a success or failure status, perform
these steps.
Procedure
Step 3 Specify the domain controller name and realm. The AAA server group must be a Kerberos type.
kcd-server aaa-server-group
Example:
Step 6 Check for the presence of a KCD server and start the domain join process. The Active Directory username
and password are used only in EXEC mode and are not saved in the configuration.
Note Administrative privileges are required for initial join. A user with service-level privileges on the
domain controller will not get access.
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Show KCD Status Information
user—Does not correspond to a specific administrative user but simply a user with service-level privileges to
add a device on the Windows domain controller.
pass—The password does not correspond to a specific password but simply a user with service-level password
privileges to add a device on the Windows domain controller
Step 7 Verify whether the KCD server command has a valid domain join status and then initiate a domain leave.
kcd domain-leave
Debug KCD
The following command is used to control the output of the KCD specific debug messages, rather than to
control the level at which ADI emits syslogs, as was the case prior to version 9.5.2:
debug webvpn kcd
Example
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Clear Cached Kerberos Tickets
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Manage APCF Packets
We recommend that you configure an APCF profile only with the assistance of Cisco personnel.
hostname(config)# webvpn
hostname(config-webvpn)# apcf https://myserver:1440/apcf/apcf2.xml
APCF Syntax
APCF profiles use XML format, and sed script syntax, with the XML tags in the following table.
Tag Use
<application>...</application> The mandatory tag that wraps the body of the XML
description.
<id> text </id> The mandatory tag that describes this particular APCF
functionality.
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Tag Use
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APCF Syntax
Tag Use
<sed-script> TEXT </sed-script> Child element of the action tag used to change the
content of text-based objects. The Text must be a valid
Sed script. The <sed-script> applies to the
<conditions> tag defined before it.
<rewrite-header>
<header>Connection</header>
<value>close</value>
</rewrite-header>
<APCF>
<version>1.0</version>
<application>
<id>Do not compress content from example.com</id>
<apcf-entities>
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Encoding
<process-request-header>
<conditions>
<server-fnmatch>*.example.com</server-fnmatch>
</conditions>
<action>
<do><no-gzip/></do>
</action>
</process-request-header>
</apcf-entities>
</application>
</APCF>
<APCF>
<version>1.0</version>
<application>
<id>Change MIME type for all .xyz objects</id>
<apcf-entities>
<process-response-header>
<conditions>
<request-uri-fnmatch>*.xyz</request-uri-fnmatch>
</conditions>
<action>
<rewrite-header>
<header>Content-Type</header>
<value>text/html</value>
</rewrite-header>
</action>
</process-response-header>
</apcf-entities>
</application>
</APCF>
Encoding
Character encoding, also called “character coding” and “a character set,” is the pairing of raw data (such as
0s and 1s) with characters to represent the data. The language determines the character encoding method to
use. Some languages use a single method, while others do not. Usually, the geographic region determines the
default encoding method used by the browser, but the remote user can change it. The browser can also detect
the encoding specified on the page, and render the document accordingly.
The encoding attribute lets you specify the value of the character-encoding method used on the portal page
to ensure that the browser renders it properly, regardless of the region in which the user is using the browser,
and regardless of any changes made to the browser.
By default, the ASA applies the “Global Encoding Type” to pages from Common Internet File System servers.
The mapping of CIFS servers to their appropriate character encoding, globally with the “Global Encoding
Type” attribute, and individually with the file-encoding exceptions displayed in the table, provides for the
accurate handling and display of CIFS pages when the proper rendering of filenames or directory paths, as
well as pages, is an issue.
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View or Specify Character Encoding
Procedure
Step 1 Global Encoding Type determines the character encoding that all Clientless SSL VPN portal pages inherit
except for those from the CIFS servers listed in the table. You can type the string or choose one of the options
from the drop-down list, which contains the most common values, as follows:
• big5
• gb2312
• ibm-850
• iso-8859-1
• shift_jis
Note If you are using Japanese Shift_jis Character encoding, click Do Not Specify in the Font Family
area of the associated Select Page Font pane to remove the font family.
• unicode
• windows-1252
• none
Note If you click none or specify a value that the browser on the Clientless SSL VPN session does
not support, it uses its own default encoding.
You can type a string consisting of up to 40 characters, and equal to one of the valid character sets identified
in http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets. You can use either the name or the alias of a character set
listed on that page. The string is case-insensitive. The command interpreter converts upper-case to lower-case
when you save the ASA configuration.
Step 2 Enter the name or IP address of a CIFS server for which the encoding requirement differs from the “Global
Encoding Type” attribute setting. The ASA retains the case you specify, although it ignores the case when
matching the name to a server.
Step 3 Choose the character encoding that the CIFS server should provide for Clientless SSL VPN portal pages. You
can type the string, or choose one from the drop-down list, which contains only the most common values, as
follows:
• big5
• gb2312
• ibm-850
• iso-8859-1
• shift_jis
Note If you are using Japanese Shift_jis Character encoding, click Do Not Specify in the Font Family
area of the associated Select Page Font pane to remove the font family.
• unicode
• windows-1252
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• none
If you click none or specify a value that the browser on the Clientless SSL VPN session does not support, it
uses its own default encoding.
You can type a string consisting of up to 40 characters, and equal to one of the valid character sets identified
in http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets. You can use either the name or the alias of a character set
listed on that page. The string is case-insensitive. The command interpreter converts upper-case to lower-case
when you save the ASA configuration.
Procedure
Step 1 Enter the URL of the email service into the address field or click an associated bookmark in the Clientless
SSL VPN session.
Step 2 When prompted, enter the email server username in the format domain\username.
Step 3 Enter the email password.
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Configure Web email: MS Outlook Web App
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CHAPTER 15
Policy Groups
• Create and Apply Clientless SSL VPN Policies for Accessing Resources, on page 303
• Connection Profile Attributes for Clientless SSL VPN, on page 303
• Group Policy and User Attributes for Clientless SSL VPN, on page 304
• Smart Tunnel Access, on page 320
• Clientless SSL VPN Capture Tool, on page 331
• Configure Portal Access Rules, on page 332
• Optimize Clientless SSL VPN Performance, on page 333
Note In earlier releases, “connection profiles” were known as “tunnel groups.” You configure a connection profile
with tunnel-group commands. This chapter often uses these terms interchangeably.
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Command Function
exit Exits from tunnel-group Clientless SSL VPN attribute configuration mode.
nbns-server Identifies the name of the NetBIOS Name Service server (nbns-server) to use for
CIFS name resolution.
group-alias Specifies the alternate names by which the server can refer to a connection profile.
group-url Identifies one or more group URLs. If you establish URLs with this attribute, this
group is selected automatically for users when they access using these URLS.
dns-group Identifies the DNS server group that specifies the DNS server name, domain name,
name server, number of retries, and timeout values.
hic-fail-group-policy Specifies a VPN feature policy if you use the Cisco Secure Desktop Manager to set
the Group-Based Policy attribute to “Use Failure Group-Policy” or “Use Success
Group-Policy, if criteria match.”
radius-reject-message Enables the display of the RADIUS reject message on the login screen when
authentication is rejected.
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Command Function
activex-relay Lets a user who has established a Clientless SSL VPN session use the browser to
launch Microsoft Office applications. The applications use the session to download
and upload ActiveX. The ActiveX relay remains in force until the Clientless SSL
VPN session closes.
auto-sign-on Sets values for auto sign-on, which requires that the user enter username and password
credentials only once for a Clientless SSL VPN connection.
deny-message Specifies the message delivered to a remote user who logs into Clientless SSL VPN
successfully, but has no VPN privileges.
file-browsing Enables CIFS file browsing for file servers and shares. Browsing requires NBNS
(Master Browser or WINS).
homepage Sets the URL of the Web page that displays upon login.
html-content-filter Configures the content and objects to filter from the HTML for this group policy.
http-proxy Configures the ASA to use an external proxy server to handle HTTP requests.
Note Proxy NTLM authentication is not supported in http-proxy. Only proxy
without authentication and basic authentication are supported.
keep-alive-ignore Sets the maximum object size to ignore for updating the session timer.
port-forward Applies a list of Clientless SSL VPN TCP ports to forward. The user interface displays
the applications in this list.
smart-tunnel Configures a list of programs and several smart tunnel parameters to use smart tunnel.
storage-objects Configures storage objects for the data stored between sessions.
url-entry Controls the ability of the user to enter any HTTP/HTTPS URL.
url-list Applies a list of servers and URLs that Clientless SSL VPN portal page displays for
end-user access.
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Configure Group Policy Attributes for Clientless SSL VPN Sessions
Command Function
Note The webvpn mode that you enter from global configuration mode lets you configure global settings for
clientless SSL VPN sessions. The webvpn mode described in this section, which you enter from group-policy
configuration mode, lets you customize a configuration of group policies specifically for clientless SSL VPN
sessions.
In group-policy webvpn configuration mode, you can specify whether to inherit or customize the following
parameters, each of which is described in the subsequent sections:
• customizations
• html-content-filter
• homepage
• filter
• url-list
• port-forward
• port-forward-name
• auto-signon
• deny message
• AnyConnect Secure Mobility Client
• keep-alive ignore
• HTTP compression
In many instances, you define the webvpn attributes as part of configuring clientless SSL VPN, then you
apply those definitions to specific groups when you configure the group-policy webvpn attributes. Enter
group-policy webvpn configuration mode by using the webvpn command in group-policy configuration mode.
Webvpn commands for group policies define access to files, URLs and TCP applications over clientless SSL
VPN sessions. They also identify ACLs and types of traffic to filter. Clientless SSL VPN is disabled by default.
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Specify a Deny Message
To remove all commands entered in group-policy webvpn configuration mode, enter the no form of this
command. These webvpn commands apply to the username or group policy from which you configure them.
webvpn
no webvpn
The following example shows how to enter group-policy webvpn configuration mode for the group policy
named FirstGroup:
The no deny-message value command removes the message string, so that the remote user does not receive
a message.
The no deny-message none command removes the attribute from the connection profile policy configuration.
The policy inherits the attribute value.
The message can be up to 491 alphanumeric characters long, including special characters, spaces, and
punctuation, but not counting the enclosing quotation marks. The text appears on the remote user’s browser
upon login. When typing the string in the deny-message value command, continue typing even if the command
wraps.
The default deny message is: “Login was successful, but because certain criteria have not been met or due to
some specific group policy, you do not have permission to use any of the VPN features. Contact your IT
administrator for more information.”
The first command in the following example creates an internal group policy named group2. The subsequent
commands modify the attributes, including the webvpn deny message associated with that policy.
Configure Group Policy Filter Attributes for Clientless SSL VPN Sessions
Specify whether to filter Java, ActiveX, images, scripts, and cookies from clientless SSL VPN sessions for
this group policy by using the html-content-filter command in webvpn mode. HTML filtering is disabled
by default.
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Specify the User Home Page
To remove a content filter, enter the no form of this command. To remove all content filters, including a null
value created by issuing the html-content-filter command with the none keyword, enter the no form of this
command without arguments. The no option allows inheritance of a value from another group policy. To
prevent inheriting an html content filter, enter the html-content-filter command with the none keyword.
Using the command a second time overrides the previous setting.
The table below describes the meaning of the keywords used in this command.
Keyword Meaning
The following example shows how to set filtering of JAVA and ActiveX, cookies, and images for the group
policy named FirstGroup:
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Configure Auto-Signon
The url-string variable following the keyword value provides a URL for the home page. The string must
begin with either http:// or https://.
Configure Auto-Signon
The auto-signon command is a single sign-on method for users of clientless SSL VPN sessions. It passes the
login credentials (username and password) to internal servers for authentication using NTLM authentication,
basic authentication, or both. Multiple auto-signon commands can be entered and are processed according to
the input order (early commands take precedence).
You can use the auto-signon feature in three modes: webvpn configuration, webvpn group configuration, or
webvpn username configuration mode. The typical precedence behavior applies where username supersedes
group, and group supersedes global. The mode you choose depends upon the desired scope of authentication.
To disable auto-signon for a particular user to a particular server, use the no form of the command with the
original specification of IP block or URI. To disable authentication to all servers, use the no form without
arguments. The no option allows inheritance of a value from the group policy.
The following example, entered in group-policy webvpn configuration mode, configures auto-signon for the
user named anyuser, using basic authentication, to servers with IP addresses ranging from 10.1.1.0 to 10.1.1.255:
The following example commands configure auto-signon for users of clientless SSL VPN sessions, using
either basic or NTLM authentication, to servers defined by the URI mask https://*.example.com/*:
The following example commands configure auto-signon for users of clientless SSL VPN sessions, using
either basic or NTLM authentication, to the server with the IP address 10.1.1.0, using subnet mask
255.255.255.0:
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Apply a URL List
ACLs for clientless SSL VPN sessions do not apply until you enter the filter command to specify them.
You configure ACLs to permit or deny various types of traffic for this group policy. You then enter the filter
command to apply those ACLs for clientless SSL VPN traffic.
The none keyword indicates that there is no webvpntype ACL. It sets a null value, thereby disallowing an
ACL and prevents inheriting an ACL from another group policy.
The ACLname string following the keyword value provides the name of the previously configured ACL.
Note Clientless SSL VPN sessions do not use ACLs defined in the vpn-filter command.
The following example shows how to set a filter that invokes an ACL named acl_in for the group policy
named FirstGroup:
The table below shows the url-list command parameters and their meanings.
Parameter Meaning
none Sets a null value for url lists. Prevents inheriting a list
from a default or specified group policy.
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Enable ActiveX Relay for a Group Policy
Parameter Meaning
The following example sets a URL list called FirstGroupURLs for the group policy named FirstGroup and
specifies that this should be the first URL list displayed on the homepage:
hostname(config-group-policy)# webvpn
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# activex-relay enable
hostname(config-group-webvpn)
Enable Application Access on Clientless SSL VPN Sessions for a Group Policy
To enable application access for this group policy, enter the port-forward command in group-policy webvpn
configuration mode. Port forwarding is disabled by default.
Before you can enter the port-forward command in group-policy webvpn configuration mode to enable
application access, you must define a list of applications that you want users to be able to use in a clientless
SSL VPN session. Enter the port-forward command in global configuration mode to define this list.
To remove the port forwarding attribute from the group-policy configuration, including a null value created
by issuing the port-forward none command, enter the no form of this command. The no option allows
inheritance of a list from another group policy. To prevent inheriting a port forwarding list, enter the
port-forward command with the none keyword. The none keyword indicates that there is no filtering. It sets
a null value, thereby disallowing a filtering, and prevents inheriting filtering values.
The syntax of the command is as follows:
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Configure the Port-Forwarding Display Name
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# no port-forward
The listname string following the keyword value identifies the list of applications users of clientless SSL
VPN sessions can access. Enter the port-forward command in webvpn configuration mode to define the list.
Using the command a second time overrides the previous setting.
The following example shows how to set a port-forwarding list called ports1 for the internal group policy
named FirstGroup:
The following example shows how to set the name, Remote Access TCP Applications, for the internal group
policy named FirstGroup:
Configure the Maximum Object Size to Ignore for Updating the Session Timer
Network devices exchange short keepalive messages to ensure that the virtual circuit between them is still
active. The length of these messages can vary. The keep-alive-ignore command lets you tell the ASA to
consider all messages that are less than or equal to the specified size as keepalive messages and not as traffic
when updating the session timer. The range is 0 through 900 KB. The default is 4 KB.
To specify the upper limit of the HTTP/HTTPS traffic, per transaction, to ignore, use the keep-alive-ignore
command in group-policy attributes webvpn configuration mode:
The no form of the command removes this specification from the configuration:
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# no keep-alive-ignore
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Specify HTTP Compression
hostname(config-group-webvpn)#
The following example sets the maximum size of objects to ignore as 5 KB:
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# keep-alive-ignore 5
hostname(config-group-webvpn)#
To remove the command from the configuration and cause the value to be inherited, use the no form of the
command:
For clientless SSL VPN sessions, the compression command configured from global configuration mode
overrides the http-comp command configured in group policy and username webvpn modes.
In the following example, compression is disabled for the group-policy sales:
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Configure Clientless SSL VPN Access for Specific Users
disabled by default. These webvpn commands apply only to the username from which you configure them.
Notice that the prompt changes, indicating that you are now in username webvpn configuration mode.
hostname(config-username)# webvpn
hostname(config-username-webvpn)#
To remove all commands entered in username webvpn configuration mode, use the no form of this command:
hostname(config-username)# no webvpn
hostname(config-username)#
You do not need to configure clientless SSL VPN to use e-mail proxies.
Note The webvpn mode that you enter from global configuration mode lets you configure global settings for
clientless SSL VPN sessions. The username webvpn configuration mode described in this section, which you
enter from username mode, lets you customize the configuration of specific users specifically for clientless
SSL VPN sessions.
In username webvpn configuration mode, you can customize the following parameters, each of which is
described in the subsequent steps:
• customizations
• deny message
• html-content-filter
• homepage
• filter
• url-list
• port-forward
• port-forward-name
• auto-signon
• AnyConnect Secure Mobility Client
• keep-alive ignore
• HTTP compression
The following example shows how to enter username webvpn configuration mode for the username anyuser
attributes:
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Specify the Content/Objects to Filter from the HTML
The following example shows how to set filtering of JAVA and ActiveX, cookies, and images for the user
named anyuser:
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Specify a Deny Message
hostname(config-username-webvpn)# no homepage
hostname(config-username-webvpn)#
The following example shows how to specify www.example.com as the home page for the user named anyuser:
The no deny-message value command removes the message string, so that the remote user does not receive
a message.
The no deny-message none command removes the attribute from the connection profile policy configuration.
The policy inherits the attribute value.
The message can be up to 491 alphanumeric characters long, including special characters, spaces, and
punctuation, but not counting the enclosing quotation marks. The text appears on the remote user’s browser
upon login. When typing the string in the deny-message value command, continue typing even if the command
wraps.
The default deny message is: “Login was successful, but because certain criteria have not been met or due to
some specific group policy, you do not have permission to use any of the VPN features. Contact your IT
administrator for more information.”
The first command in the following example enters username mode and configures the attributes for the user
named anyuser. The subsequent commands enter username webvpn configuration mode and modify the deny
message associated with that user.
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Enable ActiveX Relay for a User
To remove a list, including a null value created by using the url-list none command, enter the no form of this
command. The no option allows inheritance of a value from the group policy. To prevent inheriting a url list,
enter the url-list none command.
hostname(config-username-policy)# webvpn
hostname(config-username-webvpn)# activex-relay enable
hostname(config-username-webvpn)
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Configure the Port-Forwarding Display Name
To remove the port forwarding attribute from the configuration, including a null value created by issuing the
port-forward none command, enter the no form of this command. The no option allows inheritance of a list
from the group policy. To disallow filtering and prevent inheriting a port forwarding list, enter the port-forward
command with the none keyword.
The listname string following the keyword value identifies the list of applications users of clientless SSL
VPN can access. Enter the port-forward command in configuration mode to define the list.
Using the command a second time overrides the previous setting.
Before you can enter the port-forward command in username webvpn configuration mode to enable application
access, you must define a list of applications that you want users to be able to use in a clientless SSL VPN
session. Enter the port-forward command in global configuration mode to define this list.
The following example shows how to configure a portforwarding list called ports1:
hostname(config-group-policy)# webvpn
hostname(config-username-webvpn)# port-forward value ports1
hostname(config-username-webvpn)#
The following example shows how to configure the port-forward name test:
hostname(config-group-policy)# webvpn
hostname(config-username-webvpn)# port-forward-name value test
hostname(config-username-webvpn)#
Configure the Maximum Object Size to Ignore for Updating the Session Timer
Network devices exchange short keepalive messages to ensure that the virtual circuit between them is still
active. The length of these messages can vary. The keep-alive-ignore command lets you tell the ASA to
consider all messages that are less than or equal to the specified size as keepalive messages and not as traffic
when updating the session timer. The range is 0 through 900 KB. The default is 4 KB.
To specify the upper limit of the HTTP/HTTPS traffic, per transaction, to ignore, use the keep-alive-ignore
command in group-policy attributes webvpn configuration mode:
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Configure Auto-Signon
hostname(config-group-webvpn)#
The no form of the command removes this specification from the configuration:
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# no keep-alive-ignore
hostname(config-group-webvpn)#
The following example sets the maximum size of objects to ignore as 5 KB:
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# keep-alive-ignore 5
hostname(config-group-webvpn)#
Configure Auto-Signon
To automatically submit the login credentials of a particular user of clientless SSL VPN to internal servers
using NTLM, basic HTTP authentication, or both, use the auto-signon command in username webvpn
configuration mode.
The auto-signon command is a single sign-on method for users of clientless SSL VPN sessions. It passes the
login credentials (username and password) to internal servers for authentication using NTLM authentication,
basic authentication, or both. Multiple auto-signon commands can be entered and are processed according to
the input order (early commands take precedence).
You can use the auto-signon feature in three modes: webvpn configuration, webvpn group configuration, or
webvpn username configuration mode. The typical precedence behavior applies where username supersedes
group, and group supersedes global. The mode you choose depends upon the desired scope of authentication.
To disable auto-signon for a particular user to a particular server, use the no form of the command with the
original specification of IP block or URI. To disable authentication to all servers, use the no form without
arguments. The no option allows inheritance of a value from the group policy.
The following example commands configure auto-signon for a user of clientless SSL VPN named anyuser,
using either basic or NTLM authentication, to servers defined by the URI mask https://*.example.com/*:
The following example commands configure auto-signon for a user of clientless SSL VPN named anyuser,
using either basic or NTLM authentication, to the server with the IP address 10.1.1.0, using subnet mask
255.255.255.0:
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Smart Tunnel Access
To remove the command from the configuration and cause the value to be inherited, use the no form of the
command:
For clientless SSL VPN session, the compression command configured from global configuration mode
overrides the http-comp command configured in group policy and username webvpn modes.
In the following example, compression is disabled for the username testuser:
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About Smart Tunnels
• Add Servers to a Smart Tunnel Auto Sign-On Server List, on page 327
• Automate Smart Tunnel Access, on page 328
• Enable and Switch Off Smart Tunnel Access, on page 329
• Configure Smart Tunnel Log Off, on page 330
You can also list web-enabled applications for which to automate the submission of login credentials in smart
tunnel connections over Clientless SSL VPN sessions.
The advantage of a plug-in is that it does not require the client application to be installed on the remote
computer.
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Guidelines for Smart Tunnels
• ActiveX or Oracle Java Runtime Environment (JRE 6 or later recommended) on Windows must be
enabled on the browser.
ActiveX pages require that you enter the activex-relay command on the associated group policy. If you
do so or assign a smart tunnel list to the policy, and the browser proxy exception list on the endpoint
specifies a proxy, the user must add a “shutdown.webvpn.relay.” entry to this list.
• Only Winsock 2, TCP-based applications are eligible for smart tunnel access.
• For Mac OS X only, Java Web Start must be enabled on the browser.
• Smart tunnel is incompatible with IE's Enhanced Protected Mode.
Proxy systems can be defined the client’s configuration of static proxy entry or automatic configuration,
or by a PAC file. Only static proxy configurations are currently supported by Smart Tunnels.
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Add Applications to Be Eligible for Smart Tunnel Access
• In macOS, applications using TCP that are dynamically linked to the SSL library can work over a smart
tunnel.
• Smart tunnel does not support the following on macOS:
• Sandboxed applications (verify in Activity Monitor using View > Columns).
• Proxy services.
• Auto sign-on.
• Applications that use two-level name spaces.
• Console-based applications, such as Telnet, SSH, and cURL.
• Applications using dlopen or dlsym to locate libsocket calls.
• Statically linked applications to locate libsocket calls.
• macOS requires the full path to the process and is case-sensitive. To avoid specifying a path for each
username, insert a tilde (~) before the partial path (e.g., ~/bin/vnc).
Note The smart tunnel logon options are mutually exclusive for each group policy and
username. Use only one.
The following smart tunnel commands are available to each group policy and username. The configuration
of each group policy and username supports only one of these commands at a time, so when you enter one,
the ASA replaces the one present in the configuration of the group policy or username in question with the
new one, or in the case of the last command, simply removes the smart-tunnel command already present in
the group policy or username.
• smart-tunnel auto-start list
Start smart tunnel access automatically upon user login.
• smart-tunnel enable list
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Configure and Apply Smart Tunnel Policy
Enable smart tunnel access upon user login, but requires the user to start smart tunnel access manually,
using the Application Access > Start Smart Tunnels button on the Clientless SSL VPN portal page.
• smart-tunnel disable
Prevent smart tunnel access.
• no smart-tunnel [auto-start list | enable list | disable]
Remove a smart-tunnel command from the group policy or username configuration which then inherits
the [no] smart-tunnel command from the default group-policy. The keywords following the no
smart-tunnel command are optional, however, they restrict the removal to the named smart-tunnel
command.
Procedure
Step 2 Create a list of hosts to use for configuring smart tunnel policies:
[no] smart-tunnel network network name ip ip netmask
• network name is the name to apply to the tunnel policy.
• ip is the IP address of the network.
• netmask is the netmask of the network.
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Configure and Apply a Smart Tunnel Tunnel-Policy
Procedure
Example:
Example:
Create a tunnel policy that contains only one host (assuming the inventory pages are hosted at
www.example.com (10.5.2.2), and you want to configure both IP address and name for the hosts).
Step 3 Apply the tunnel-specified tunnel policy to the partner’s group policy:
ciscoasa(config-group-webvpn)# smart-tunnel tunnel-policy tunnelspecified inventory
Step 4 (Optional) Specify the group policy home page and enable smart tunnel on it.
Example:
Example:
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Create a Smart Tunnel Auto Sign-On Server List
Note Without writing a script or uploading anything, an administrator can specify which homepage to
connect with via smart tunnel.
Smart tunnel policy configuration is a good option when a vendor wants to provide a partner with clientless
access to an internal inventory server page upon login without going through the clientless portal first.
By default, configuration of a smart tunnel application is not necessary because all processes initiated by the
browser with smart tunnel enabled have access to the tunnel. However, because no portal is visible, you may
want to enable the logout notification icon.
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Add Servers to a Smart Tunnel Auto Sign-On Server List
Step 3 (Optional) Remove an entry from the list of servers, specifying both the list and IP address or hostname as it
appears in the ASA configuration:
no smart-tunnel auto-sign-on list [use-domain] [realm realm-string] [port port-num]{ip ip-address [netmask]
| host hostname-mask}
Step 6 Add all hosts in the subnet and adds the Windows domain to the username if authentication requires it:
smart-tunnel auto-sign-on HR use-domain ip 93.184.216.119 255.255.255.0
Step 7 (Optional) Remove that entry from the list and the list named HR if the entry removed is the only entry in the
list:
no smart-tunnel auto-sign-on HR use-domain ip 93.184.216.119 255.255.255.0
Step 9 Add all hosts in the domain to the smart tunnel auto sign-on list named intranet:
smart-tunnel auto-sign-on intranet host *.example.com
Note The smart-tunnel auto sign-on feature supports only applications communicating
HTTP and HTTPS using Internet Explorer and Firefox.
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Automate Smart Tunnel Access
• If you are using Firefox, make sure that you specify hosts using an exact hostname or IP address (instead
of a host mask with wildcards, a subnet using IP addresses, or a netmask). For example, within Firefox,
you cannot enter *.cisco.com and expect auto sign-on to host email.cisco.com.
Procedure
Step 4 Enable smart tunnel auto sign-on Clientless SSL VPN sessions:
smart-tunnel auto-sign-on enable
Step 5 (Optional) Switch off smart tunnel auto sign-on Clientless SSL VPN session, remove it from the group policy
or username, and use the default:
[no] smart-tunnel auto-sign-on enable list [domain domain]
• list—The name of a smart tunnel auto sign-on list already present in the ASA Clientless SSL VPN
configuration.
• domain (optional)—The name of the domain to be added to the username during authentication. If you
enter a domain, enter the use-domain keyword in the list entries.
Step 6 View the smart tunnel auto sign-on list entries in the SSL VPN configuration:
show running-config webvpn smart-tunnel
Step 7 Enable the smart tunnel auto sign-on list named HR:
smart-tunnel auto-sign-on enable HR
Step 8 Enable the smart tunnel auto sign-on list named HR and adds the domain named CISCO to the username
during authentication:
smart-tunnel auto-sign-on enable HR domain CISCO
Step 9 (Optional) Remove the smart tunnel auto sign-on list named HR from the group policy and inherits the smart
tunnel auto sign-on list command from the default group policy:
no smart-tunnel auto-sign-on enable HR
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Enable and Switch Off Smart Tunnel Access
Procedure
hostname(config-group-policy)# webvpn
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# smart-tunnel auto-start apps1
This assigns the smart tunnel list named apps1 to the group policy.
Step 5 Display the smart tunnel list entries in the SSL VPN configuration:
show running-config webvpn smart-tunnel
Step 6 Remove the smart-tunnel command from the group policy or username and reverts to the default:
no smart-tunnel
Procedure
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Configure Smart Tunnel Log Off
hostname(config-group-policy)# webvpn
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# smart-tunnel enable apps1
This example assigns the smart tunnel list named apps1 to the group policy.
Step 5 Display the smart tunnel list entries in the SSL VPN configuration:
show running-config webvpn smart-tunnel
Step 6 Remove the smart-tunnel command from the group policy or local user policy and reverts to the default group
policy:
no smart-tunnel
Note We strongly recommend the use of the logout button on the portal. This method pertains to Clientless SSL
VPNs and logs off regardless of whether smart tunnel is used or not. The notification icon should be used
only when using standalone applications without the browser.
Configure Smart Tunnel Log Off when Its Parent Process Terminates
This practice requires the closing of all browsers to signify log off. The smart tunnel lifetime is now tied to
the starting process lifetime. For example, if you started a smart tunnel from Internet Explorer, the smart
tunnel is turned off when no iexplore.exe is running. Smart tunnel can determine that the VPN session has
ended even if the user closed all browsers without logging out.
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Configure Smart Tunnel Log Off with a Notification Icon
Note In some cases, a lingering browser process is unintentional and is strictly a result of an error. Also, when a
Secure Desktop is used, the browser process can run in another desktop even if the user closed all browsers
within the secure desktop. Therefore, smart tunnel declares all browser instances gone when no more visible
windows exist in the current desktop.
Procedure
Step 2 When using a proxy and adding to the proxy list exception, ensure that smart tunnel is properly closed when
you log off, regardless of icon usage or not.
*.webvpn.
Note This icon is an alternative way to log out of SSL VPN. It is not an indicator of VPN session status.
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Configure Portal Access Rules
• mangled.1, 2,3, 4... and so on, depending on the Web page activity. The mangle files record the html
actions of the VPN Concentrator transferring these pages on a Clientless SSL VPN connection.
• original.1,2,3,4... and so on, depending on the Web page activity. The original files are the files the URL
sent to the VPN Concentrator.
To open and view the files output by the capture tool, go to Administration | File Management. Zip the output
files and send them to your Cisco support representative.
Note Using the Clientless SSL VPN capture tool does impact VPN Concentrator performance. Ensure you switch
off the capture tool after you have generated the output files.
Procedure
Step 2 Permit or deny the creation of a Clientless SSL VPN session based on an HTTP header code or a string in the
HTTP header:
portal-access-rule priority [{permit | deny [code code]} {any | user-agent match string}
Example:
The second example shows the proper syntax for specifying a string with a space. Surround the string with
wildcards (*) and then quotes (“ ”).
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Optimize Clientless SSL VPN Performance
Configure Caching
Caching enhances Clientless SSL VPN performance. It stores frequently reused objects in the system cache,
which reduces the need to perform repeated rewriting and compressing of content. It reduces traffic between
Clientless SSL VPN and the remote servers, with the result that many applications run much more efficiently.
By default, caching is enabled. You can customize the way caching works for your environment by using the
caching commands in cache mode.
Procedure
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Switch Off Content Rewrite
This example shows the creation of a trustpoint named mytrustpoint and its assignment to signing Java objects.
Procedure
Step 2 Specify applications and resources to access outside a clientless SSLN VPN tunnel:
rewrite
You can use this command multiple times.
Procedure
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Use Proxy Bypass
webvpn
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Use Proxy Bypass
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CHAPTER 16
Clientless SSL VPN Remote Users
This chapter summarizes configuration requirements and tasks for the user remote system. It also helps users
get started with Clientless SSL VPN. It includes the following sections:
Note Make sure that the ASA has been configured for Clientless SSL VPN.
Note Make sure that the ASA has been configured for Clientless SSL VPN.
Table 19: Usernames and Passwords to Give to Clientless SSL VPN Users
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Communicate Security Tips
Clientless SSL VPN Access remote network Starting a Clientless SSL VPN
session
File Server Access remote file server Using the Clientless SSL VPN file
browsing feature to access a remote
file server
Corporate Application Login Access firewall-protected internal Using the Clientless SSL VPN Web
server browsing feature to access an
internal protected website
Mail Server Access remote mail server via Sending or receiving email
Clientless SSL VPN messages
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Configure Remote Systems to Use Clientless SSL VPN Features
Table 20: Clientless SSL VPN Remote System Configuration and End User Requirements
Starting Clientless SSL VPN Connection to the Internet Any Internet connection is supported,
including:
• Home DSL, cable, or dial-up
• Public kiosks
• Hotel hook-ups
• Airport wireless nodes
• Internet cafes
On Linux:
• Firefox 8
On Mac OS X:
• Safari 5
• Firefox 8
URL for Clientless SSL VPN An HTTPS address in the following form:
https://address
where address is the IP address or DNS
hostname of an interface of the ASA (or
load balancing cluster) on which Clientless
SSL VPN is enabled. For example:
https://10.89.192.163 or
https://cisco.example.com.
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Configure Remote Systems to Use Clientless SSL VPN Features
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Configure Remote Systems to Use Clientless SSL VPN Features
Web Browsing Usernames and passwords for protected Using Clientless SSL VPN does not ensure
websites that communication with every site is
secure. See “Communicate Security Tips,
on page 338.”
Network Browsing and File Management File permissions configured for shared Only shared folders and files are accessible
remote access via Clientless SSL VPN.
Domain, workgroup, and server names Users may not be familiar with how to
where folders and files reside locate their files through your organization
network.
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Configure Remote Systems to Use Clientless SSL VPN Features
Using Applications Note On Mac OS X, only the Safari browser supports this feature.
(called Port Forwarding or Application
Access) Note Because this feature requires installing Oracle Java Runtime Environment
(JRE) and configuring the local clients, and because doing so requires
administrator permissions on the local system, it is unlikely that users will
be able to use applications when they connect from public remote systems.
Users should always close the Application Access window when they finish using
applications by clicking the Close icon. Failure to close the window properly can cause
Application Access or the applications themselves to be inaccessible.
Oracle Java Runtime Environment (JRE) If JRE is not installed, a pop-up window
installed. displays, directing users to a site where it
is available.
JavaScript must be enabled on the browser.
By default, it is enabled. On rare occasions, the port forwarding
applet fails with Java exception errors. If
this happens, do the following:
1. Clear the browser cache and close the
browser.
2. Verify that no Java icons are in the
computer task bar. Close all instances
of Java.
3. Establish a Clientless SSL VPN session
and launch the port forwarding Java
applet.
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Configure Remote Systems to Use Clientless SSL VPN Features
Using email via Application Access Fulfill requirements for Application Access To use mail, start Application Access from
(See Using Applications) the Clientless SSL VPN Home page. The
mail client is then available for use.
Note If you are using an IMAP client and you lose your mail server connection or
are unable to make a new connection, close the IMAP application and restart
Clientless SSL VPN.
Using email via Web Access Web-based email product installed Supported products include:
• Outlook Web Access
For best results, use OWA on Internet
Explorer 8.x or higher, or Firefox 8.x.
• Lotus Notes
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Capture Clientless SSL VPN Data
Using email via email Proxy SSL-enabled mail application installed Supported mail applications:
Do not set the ASA SSL version to TLSv1 • Microsoft Outlook
Only. Outlook and Outlook Express do not
support TLS. • Microsoft Outlook Express versions
5.5 and 6.0
Note Enabling Clientless SSL VPN capture affects the performance of the ASA. Ensure
that you switch off the capture after you generate the capture files needed for
troubleshooting.
Procedure
Step 1 Start the Clientless SSL VPN capture utility, to capture packets
capture capture-name type webvpn user csslvpn-username
• capture-name is a name you assign to the capture, which is also prefixed to the name of the capture files.
• csslvpn-username is the username to match for capture.
Example:
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Use a Browser to Display Capture Data
hostname# no capture hr
The capture utility creates a capture-name.zip file, which is encrypted with the password koleso
Step 3 Send the .zip file to Cisco, or attach it to a Cisco TAC service request.
Step 4 To look at the contents of the .zip file, unzip it using the password koleso.
Procedure
Example:
hostname# no capture hr
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CHAPTER 17
Clientless SSL VPN Users
• Manage Passwords, on page 347
• Use Single Sign-On with Clientless SSL VPN, on page 349
• Username and Password Requirements, on page 364
• Communicate Security Tips, on page 365
• Configure Remote Systems to Use Clientless SSL VPN Features, on page 365
Manage Passwords
Optionally, you can configure the ASA to warn end users when their passwords are about to expire.
The ASA supports password management for the RADIUS and LDAP protocols. It supports the
“password-expire-in-days” option for LDAP only.
You can configure password management for IPsec remote access and SSL VPN tunnel-groups.
When you configure password management, the ASA notifies the remote user at login that the user’s current
password is about to expire or has expired. The ASA then offers the user the opportunity to change the
password. If the current password has not yet expired, the user can still log in using that password.
This command is valid for AAA servers that support such notification.
The ASA, releases 7.1 and later, generally supports password management for the following connection types
when authenticating with LDAP or with any RADIUS configuration that supports MS-CHAPv2:
• AnyConnect VPN Client
• IPsec VPN Client
• Clientless SSL VPN
The RADIUS server (for example, Cisco ACS) could proxy the authentication request to another authentication
server. However, from the ASA perspective, it is talking only to a RADIUS server.
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• If you are using an LDAP directory server for authentication, password management is supported with
the Sun Java System Directory Server (formerly named the Sun ONE Directory Server) and the Microsoft
Active Directory.
• Sun—The DN configured on the ASA to access a Sun directory server must be able to access the
default password policy on that server. We recommend using the directory administrator, or a user
with directory administrator privileges, as the DN. Alternatively, you can place an ACI on the default
password policy.
• Microsoft—You must configure LDAP over SSL to enable password management with Microsoft
Active Directory.
• Some RADIUS servers that support MSCHAP currently do not support MSCHAPv2. This command
requires MSCHAPv2 so check with your vendor.
• Password management is not supported for any of these connection types for Kerberos/Active Directory
(Windows password) or NT 4.0 Domain.
• For LDAP, the method to change a password is proprietary for the different LDAP servers on the market.
Currently, the ASA implements the proprietary password management logic only for Microsoft Active
Directory and Sun LDAP servers.
• The ASA ignores this command if RADIUS or LDAP authentication has not been configured.
• The password-management command does not change the number of days before the password expires,
but rather, the number of days ahead of expiration that the ASA starts warning the user that the password
is about to expire.
Procedure
• If you specify the password-expire-in-days keyword, you must also specify the number of days.
• If you set the number of days to 0, this command is switched off.
In this example, the ASA starts warning the user of the password expiration, 90 days before the expiration
date.
Note If the password-expire-in-days keyword is not set, the ASA does not notify the user of the pending
expiration, but the user can change the password after it expires.
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Circle of Trust
The trust relationship between the ASA and the SAML Identity Provider is established through configured
certificates (ASA trustpoints).
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Guidelines and Limitations for SAML 2.0
The trust relationship between the end user and SAML Identity Provider is established through the authentication
configured on IdP.
SAML Timeouts
In SAML assertion, there are NotBefore and NotOnOrAfter as follows: <saml:Conditions
NotBefore="2015-03-10T19:47:41Z" NotOnOrAfter="2015-03-10T20:47:41Z">
A SAML timeout configured on the ASA will override NotOnOrAfter if the sum of NotBefore and timeout
is earlier than NotOnOrAfter. If NotBefore + timeout is later than NotOnOrAfter, then NotOnOrAfter will
take effect.
The timeout should be very short to prevent the assertion from being re-used after the timeout. You must
synchronize your ASA's Network Time Protocol (NTP) server with the IdP NTP server in order to use the
SAML feature.
• SAML 2.0 SSO support applies to Clientless VPN only. AnyConnect is not supported.
• ASA supports SAML 2.0 Redirect-POST binding , which is supported by all SAML IdPs.
• The ASA functions as a SAML SP only. It cannot act as an Identity Provider in gateway mode or peer
mode.
• SAML 2.0 SSO does not support internal SAML IdP and SPs, only external ones outside of the private
network.
• This SAML SSO SP feature is a mutual exclusion authentication method. It cannot be used with AAA
and certificate together.
• Features that are based on username/password authentication, certificate authentication, and KCD are
not supported. For instance, username/password pre-filling feature, form-based Auto sign-on, Macro
Substitution based Auto sign-on, KCD SSO, and so on.
• DAP is not supported for SAML enabled tunnel groups.
• Existing Clientless VPN timeout settings still apply to SAML sessions.
• ASA administrators need to ensure clock synchronization between the ASA and the SAML IdP for proper
handling of authentication assertions and proper timeout behavior.
• ASA administrators have the responsibility to maintain a valid signing certificate on both ASA and IdP
considering the following:
• The IdP signing certificate is mandatory when configuring an IdP on the ASA.
• The ASA does not do a revocation check on the signing certificate received from the IdP.
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• In SAML assertions, there are NotBefore and NotOnOrAfter conditions. The ASA SAML configured
timeout interacts with these conditions as follows:
• Timeout overrides NotOnOrAfter if the sum of NotBefore and timeout is earlier than NotOnOrAfter.
• If NotBefore + timeout is later than NotOnOrAfter, then NotOnOrAfter takes effect.
• If the NotBefore attribute is absent, the ASA denies the login request. If the NotOnOrAfter attribute
is absent and SAML timeout is not set, ASA denies the login request.
Procedure
Step 1 Create a SAML identity provider in webvpn config mode and enter saml-idp sub-mode under webvpn.
[no] saml idp idp-entityID
idp-entityID— The SAML IdP entityID must contain 4 to 256 characters.
To remove a SAML IdP, use the no form of this command.
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sp —Specifies the trustpoint that contains the ASA (SP)'s certificate for the IdP to verify ASA's signature or
encrypted SAML assertion.
trustpoint-name—Must be a previously configured trustpoint.
Step 6 (Optional) Enable or disable (default setting) the signature in SAML request.
signature
Example
The following example configures an IdP named salesforce_idp and uses preconfigured trustpoints:
ciscoasa(config)# webvpn
ciscoasa(config-webvpn)#saml idp salesforce_idp
ciscoasa(config-webvpn-saml-idp)#url sign-in
https://asa-dev-ed.my.salesforce.com/idp/endpoint/HttpRedirect
ciscoasa(config-webvpn-saml-idp)#url sign-out
https://asa-dev-ed.my.salesforce.com/idp/endpoint/HttpRedirect
The following web page shows an example of how to get URLs for Onelogin,
https://onelogin.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/202767260-Configuring-SAML-for-Clarizen
The following web page is an example of how to use metadata to find the URLs from OneLogin.
http://onlinehelp.tableau.com/current/online/en-us/saml_config_onelogin.htm
What to do next
Apply SAML authentication to connection profiles, as described in Configure ASA as a SAML 2.0 Service
Provider (SP), on page 353.
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Configure ASA as a SAML 2.0 Service Provider (SP)
Note If you are using SAML authentication with AnyConnect 4.4 or 4.5 and you deploy ASA version 9.7.1.24 (or
later), 9.8.2.28 (or later), or 9.9.2.1 (or later) (Release Date: 18-APR-2018), the defaulted SAML behavior is
the embedded browser, which is not supported on AnyConnect 4.4 and 4.5. Therefore, you must enable the
saml external-browser command in tunnel group configuration in order for AnyConnect 4.4 and 4.5 clients
to authenticate with SAML using the external (native) browser.
The saml external-browser command is for migration purposes for those upgrading to AnyConnect 4.6 or
later. Because of security limitations, use this solution only as part of a temporary migration while upgrading
AnyConnect software. The command itself will be depreciated in the future.
Procedure
Step 1 In tunnel-group webvpn sub-mode, use the saml identify-provider command to assign an IdP.
[no] saml identify-provider idp-entityID
idp-entityID—Must be one of the existing IdPs previously configured.
To disable SAML SP, use the no form of this command.
Example
ciscoasa(config)# webvpn
ciscoasa(config-webvpn)# tunnel-group-list enable
ciscoasa(config)# tunnel-group cloud_idp_onelogin type remote-access
ciscoasa(config)# tunnel-group cloud_idp_onelogin webvpn-attributes
ciscoasa(config-tunnel-webvpn)# authentication saml
ciscoasa(config-tunnel-webvpn)# group-alias cloud_idp enable
ciscoasa(config-tunnel-webvpn)# saml identity-provider
https://app.onelogin.com/saml/metadata/462950
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Example SAML 2.0 and Onelogin
2. Obtain the IdP's SAML metadata from the IdP following procedures provided by your third party IdP.
3. Import the IdP's signing certificate into a trustpoint.
ciscoasa(config)# crypto ca trustpoint onelogin
ciscoasa(config-ca-trustpoint)# enrollment terminal
ciscoasa(config-ca-trustpoint)# no ca-check
ciscoasa(config-ca-trustpoint)# crypto ca authenticate onelogin
Enter the base 64 encoded CA certificate.
End with the word "quit" on a line by itself
quit
INFO: Certificate has the following attributes:
Fingerprint: 85de3781 07388f5b d92d9d14 1e22a549
Do you accept this certificate? [yes/no]: yes
Trustpoint CA certificate accepted.
% Certificate successfully imported
Configure the Clientless VPN base URL, SAML request signature and SAML assertion timout:
ciscoasa(config-webvpn-saml-idp)# base-url https://172.23.34.222
ciscoasa(config-webvpn-saml-idp)# signature
ciscoasa(config-webvpn-saml-idp)# timeout assertion 7200
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9. Configure a SAML SP on your third party IdP following procedures provided by your third party IdP.
Mode Scope
Examples
• Configure auto-sign-on for all users of Clientless SSL VPN to servers with IP addresses ranging
from 10.1.1.0 to 10.1.1.255 using NTLM authentication:
hostname(config-webvpn)# auto-sign-on allow ip 10.1.1.1 255.255.255.0 auth-type ntlm
• Configure auto-sign-on for all users of Clientless SSL VPN, using basic HTTP authentication,
to servers defined by the URI mask https://*.example.com/*:
hostname(config-webvpn)# auto-sign-on allow uri https://*.example.com/* auth-type
• Configure auto-sign-on for Clientless SSL VPN sessions associated with the ExamplePolicy
group policy, using either basic or NTLM authentication, to servers defined by the URI mask:
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Configure SSO with the HTTP Form Protocol
all
• Configure auto-sign-on for a user named Anyuser to servers with IP addresses ranging from
10.1.1.0 to 10.1.1.255 using HTTP Basic authentication:
The following figure illustrates the SSO authentication steps, described below:
Figure 9: SSO Authentication Using HTTP Forms
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Configure SSO with the HTTP Form Protocol
1. A user of Clientless SSL VPN first enters a username and password to log on to the Clientless SSL VPN
server on the ASA.
2. The Clientless SSL VPN server acts as a proxy for the user and forwards the form data (username and
password) to an authenticating Web server using a POST authentication request.
3. If the authenticating Web server approves the user data, it returns an authentication cookie to the Clientless
SSL VPN server where it is stored on behalf of the user.
4. The Clientless SSL VPN server establishes a tunnel to the user.
5. The user can now access other websites within the protected SSO environment without re-entering a
username and password.
While you would expect to configure form parameters that let the ASA include POST data such as the username
and password, you initially may not be aware of additional hidden parameters that the Web server requires.
Some authentication applications expect hidden data which is neither visible to nor entered by the user. You
can, however, discover hidden parameters the authenticating Web server expects by making a direct
authentication request to the Web server from your browser without the ASA in the middle acting as a proxy.
Analyzing the Web server response using an HTTP header analyzer reveals hidden parameters in a format
similar to the following:
Some hidden parameters are mandatory and some are optional. If the Web server requires data for a hidden
parameter, it rejects any authentication POST request that omits that data. Because a header analyzer does
not tell you if a hidden parameter is mandatory or not, we recommend that you include all hidden parameters
until you determine which are mandatory.
To configure SSO with the HTTP Form protocol, you must perform the following:
• Configure the uniform resource identifier on the authenticating Web server to receive and process the
form data (action-uri).
• Configure the username parameter (user-parameter).
• Configure the user password parameter (password-parameter).
You may also need to do the following tasks depending upon the requirements of authenticating Web server:
• Configure a starting URL if the authenticating Web server requires a pre-login cookie exchange (start-url).
• Configure any hidden authentication parameters required by the authenticating Web server
(hidden-parameter).
• Configure the name of an authentication cookie set by the authenticating Web server (auth-cookie-name).
Procedure
Step 2 If the authenticating Web server requires it, specify the URL from which to retrieve a pre-login cookie from
the authenticating Web server:
start-url
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Example:
Step 3 Specify a URI for an authentication program on the authenticating Web server:
action-uri
Example:
http://www.example.com/auth/index.html/appdir/authc/forms/MCOlogin.fcc?TYPE=33554433
&REALMOID=06-000a1311-a828-1185-ab41-8333b16a0008&GUID=&SMAUTHREASON=0&METHOD=GET&SMAGENTNA
ME=$SM$5FZmjnk3DRNwNjk2KcqVCFbIrNT9%2bJ0H0KPshFtg6rB1UV2PxkHqLw%3d%3d&TARGET=https%3A%2F%2F
auth.example.com
A URI can be entered on multiple, sequential lines. The maximum number of characters per line is 255. The
maximum number of characters for a complete URI is 2048.
You must include the hostname and protocol in the action URI. In this example, these appear at the start of
the URI in http://www.example.com.
Step 4 Configure the userid username parameter for the HTTP POST request:
user-parameter
Example:
Step 5 Configure the user_password user password parameter for the HTTP POST request:
password-parameter
Example:
Step 6 Specify hidden parameters for exchange with the authenticating Web server:
hidden-parameter
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Example:
This example shows an example hidden parameter excerpted from a POST request. This hidden parameter
includes four form entries and their values, separated by &. The entries and their values are:
• SMENC with a value of ISO-8859-1.
• SMLOCALE with a value of US-EN.
• target with a value of https%3A%2F%2Ffanyv88.com%3A443%2Fhttps%2Fwww.example.com%2Femco%2Fappdir%2FAreaRoot.do.
• %3FEMCOPageCode%3DENG.
• smauthreason with a value of 0.
Step 9 Configure a tunnel-group to use the SSO server configured in the previous steps:
authentication-server-group
Example:
This example configures the tunnel-group named /testgroup/ to use the SSO server(s) named /testgrp1/”.
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Gather HTTP Form Data
Step 13 Configure a tunnel-group to use the SSO server configured in the previous steps:
authentication-server-group group
Example:
This example configures a tunnel-group named /testgroup/ to use the SSO server(s) named /testgrp1/”.
Procedure
Step 1 Start your browser and HTTP header analyzer, and connect directly to the Web server login page without
going through the ASA.
Step 2 After the Web server login page has loaded in your browser, examine the login sequence to determine if a
cookie is being set during the exchange. If the Web server has loaded a cookie with the login page, configure
this login page URL as the start-URL.
Step 3 Enter the username and password to log on to the Web server, and press Enter. This action generates the
authentication POST request that you examine using the HTTP header analyzer.
An example POST request—with host HTTP header and body—follows:
POST
/emco/myemco/authc/forms/MCOlogin.fcc?TYPE=33554433&REALMOID=06-000430e1-7443-125c
-ac05-83846dc90034&GUID=&SMAUTHREASON=0&METHOD=GET&SMAGENTNAME=$SM$5FZmjnk3DRNwNjk
2KcqVCFbIrNT9%2bJ0H0KPshFtg6rB1UV2PxkHqLw%3d%3d&TARGET=https%3A%2F%2Ffanyv88.com%3A443%2Fhttps%2Fwww.example.c
om%2Femco%2Fmyemco%2FHTTP/1.1
Host: www.example.com
(BODY)
SMENC=ISO-8859-1&SMLOCALE=US-EN&USERID=Anyuser&USER_PASSWORD=XXXXXX&target=https
%3A%2F%2Fwww.example.com%2Femco%2Fmyemco%2F&smauthreason=0
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Step 4 Examine the POST request and copy the protocol, host, and the complete URL to configure the action-uri
parameter.
Step 5 Examine the POST request body and copy the following:
a) Username parameter. In the preceding example, this parameter is USERID, not the value anyuser.
b) Password parameter. In the preceding example, this parameter is USER_PASSWORD.
c) Hidden parameter.
This parameter is everything in the POST body except the username and password parameters. In the
preceding example, the hidden parameter is:
SMENC=ISO-8859-1&SMLOCALE=US-EN&target=https%3A%2F%2Ffanyv88.com%3A443%2Fhttps%2Fwww.example.com%2
Femco%2Fmyemco%2F&smauthreason=0
The following figure highlights the action URI, hidden, username and password parameters within sample
output from an HTTP analyzer. This is only an example; output varies widely across different websites.
Figure 10: Action-uri, hidden, username and password parameters
2 Hidden parameters
Step 6 If you successfully log on to the Web server, examine the server response with the HTTP header analyzer to
locate the name of the session cookie set by the server in your browser. This is the auth-cookie-name parameter.
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In the following server response header, the name of the session cookie is SMSESSION. You just need the
name, not the value.
Set-Cookie:
SMSESSION=yN4Yp5hHVNDgs4FT8dn7+Rwev41hsE49XlKc+1twie0gqnjbhkTkUnR8XWP3hvDH6PZ
PbHIHtWLDKTa8ngDB/lbYTjIxrbDx8WPWwaG3CxVa3adOxHFR8yjD55GevK3ZF4ujgU1lhO6fta0d
SSOSepWvnsCb7IFxCw+MGiw0o88uHa2t4l+SillqfJvcpuXfiIAO06D/gtDF40Ow5YKHEl2KhDEvv
+yQzxwfEz2cl7Ef5iMr8LgGcDK7qvMcvrgUqx68JQOK2+RSwtHQ15bCZmsDU5vQVCvSQWC8OMHNGw
pS253XwRLvd/h6S/tM0k98QMv+i3N8oOdj1V7flBqecH7+kVrU01F6oFzr0zM1kMyLr5HhlVDh7B0
k9wp0dUFZiAzaf43jupD5f6CEkuLeudYW1xgNzsR8eqtPK6t1gFJyOn0s7QdNQ7q9knsPJsekRAH9
hrLBhWBLTU/3B1QS94wEGD2YTuiW36TiP14hYwOlCAYRj2/bY3+lYzVu7EmzMQ+UefYxh4cF2gYD8
RZL2RwmP9JV5l48I3XBFPNUw/3V5jf7nRuLr/CdfK3OO8+Pa3V6/nNhokErSgyxjzMd88DVzM41Lx
xaUDhbcmkoHT9ImzBvKzJX0J+o7FoUDFOxEdIqlAN4GNqk49cpi2sXDbIarALp6Bl3+tbB4MlHGH+
0CPscZXqoi/kon9YmGauHyRs+0m6wthdlAmCnvlJCDfDoXtn8DpabgiW6VDTrvl3SGPyQtUv7Wdah
uq5SxbUzjY2JxQnrUtwB977NCzYu2sOtN+dsEReWJ6ueyJBbMzKyzUB4L3i5uSYN50B4PCv1w5KdR
Ka5p3N0Nfq6RM6dfipMEJw0Ny1sZ7ohz3fbvQ/YZ7lw/k7ods/8VbaR15ivkE8dSCzuf/AInHtCzu
Q6wApzEp9CUoG8/dapWriHjNoi4llJOgCst33wEhxFxcWy2UWxs4EZSjsI5GyBnefSQTPVfma5dc/
emWor9vWr0HnTQaHP5rg5dTNqunkDEdMIHfbeP3F90cZejVzihM6igiS6P/CEJAjE;Domain=.exa
mple.com;Path=/
The following figure shows an example of authorization cookies in HTTP analyzer output. This is only an
example; output varies widely across different websites.
Figure 11: Authorization Cookies in Sample HTTP Analyzer Output
1 Authorization cookies
Step 7 In some cases, the server may set the same cookie regardless of whether the authentication was successful or
not, and such a cookie is unacceptable for SSO purposes. To confirm that the cookies are different, repeat
Step 1 through Step 6 using invalid login credentials and then compare the “failure” cookie with the “success”
cookie. You now have the necessary parameter data to configure the ASA for SSO with HTTP Form protocol.
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not have the option to perform SSO on different fields, such as the internal domain password or the attribute
on a RADIUS or LDAP server.
To configure SSO support for a plug-in, you install the plug-in and add a bookmark entry to display a link to
the server, specifying SSO support using the csco_sso=1 parameter. The following examples show plug-in
bookmarks enabled for SSO:
ssh://ssh-server/?cisco_sso=1
rdp://rdp-server/?Parameter1=value&Parameter2=value&csco_sso=1
Note Smart tunnel bookmarks support auto-sign-on but not variable substitution. For example, a SharePoint bookmark
configured for smart tunnel uses the same username and password credentials to log on to the application as
the credentials used to log on to Clientless SSL VPN. (This SSO functionality applies only to clientless VPN
and not to AnyConnect.) You can use variable substitutions and auto sign-on simultaneously or separately.
You can now use bookmarks with macro substitutions for auto sign-on on some Web pages. The former POST
plug-in approach was created so that administrators could specify a POST bookmark with sign-on macros
and receive a kick-off page to load prior to posting the POST request. This POST plug-in approach eliminated
those requests that required the presence of cookies or other header items. Now an an administrator determines
the pre-load page and URL, which specifies where the post login request is sent. A pre-load page enables an
endpoint browser to fetch certain information that is sent along to the webserver or Web application rather
than just using a POST request with credentials.
The following variables (or macros) allow for substitutions in bookmarks and forms-based HTTP POST
operations:
• CSCO_WEBVPN_USERNAME—User login ID
• CSCO_WEBVPN_PASSWORD—User login password
• CSCO_WEBVPN_INTERNAL_PASSWORD—User internal (or domain) password. This cached
credential is not authenticated against a AAA server. When you enter this value, the security appliance
uses it as the password for auto sign-on, instead of the password/primary password value.
Note You cannot use any of these three variables in GET-based http(s) bookmarks.
Only POST-based http(s) and cifs bookmarks can use these variables.
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Username and Password Requirements
A value such as www.cisco.com/email dynamically populates a bookmark on the Clientless SSL VPN
portal, such as https://CSCO_WEBVPN_MACRO1 or https://CSCO_WEBVPN_MACRO2 for the
particular DAP or group policy.
Each time Clientless SSL VPN recognizes one of these six strings in an end-user request (in the form of a
bookmark or Post Form), it replaces the string with the user-specified value and then passes the request to a
remote server.
If the lookup of the username and password fails on the ASA, an empty string is substituted, and the behavior
converts back as if no auto sign-in is available.
Internet Service Provider Access the Internet Connecting to an Internet service provider
Clientless SSL VPN Access remote network Starting Clientless SSL VPN
File Server Access remote file server Using the Clientless SSL VPN file
browsing feature to access a remote file
server
Corporate Application Login Access firewall-protected internal server Using the Clientless SSL VPN Web
browsing feature to access an internal
protected website
Mail Server Access remote mail server via Clientless Sending or receiving email messages
SSL VPN
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Communicate Security Tips
You may configure user accounts differently and different Clientless SSL VPN features can be available to
each user.
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Prerequisites for Clientless SSL VPN
Note See the Supported VPN Platforms, Cisco ASA 5500 Series for the list of Web browsers supported by Clientless
SSL VPN.
Note Clientless SSL VPN supports local printing, but it does not support printing
through the VPN to a printer on the corporate network.
Tip To paste text into a text field, use Ctrl-V. (Right-clicking is switched off on the toolbar displayed during the
Clientless SSL VPN session.)
Note If you configure your browser to block popups, the floating toolbar cannot display.
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Browse the Network (File Management)
• Entering the URL in the Enter Web Address field on the Clientless SSL VPN Home page
• Clicking on a preconfigured website link on the Clientless SSL VPN Home page
• Clicking a link on a webpage accessed via one of the previous two methods
• You need the username and password for protected websites
Note Do not interrupt the Copy File to Server command or navigate to a different screen while the copying is in
progress. Interrupting the operation can cause an incomplete file to be saved on the server.
Note Only shared folders and files are accessible via Clientless SSL VPN.
Note This functionality requires that the Oracle Java Runtime Environment (JRE) is installed on the user’s machine
and that Java is enabled in the Web browser. Launching remote files requires JRE 1.6 or later.
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Use Port Forwarding
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Use email Via Port Forwarding
Note The Microsoft Outlook client does not require this configuration step. All
non-Windows client applications require configuration. To determine if
configuration is necessary for a Windows application, check the value of the
Remote Server field. If the Remote Server field contains the server hostname,
you do not need to configure the client application. If the Remote Server field
contains an IP address, you must configure the client application.
Procedure
Step 1 Start a Clientless SSL VPN session and click the Application Access link on the Home page. The Application
Access window appears.
Step 2 In the Name column, find the name of the server to use, then identify its corresponding client IP address and
port number (in the Local column).
Step 3 Use this IP address and port number to configure the client application. Configuration steps vary for each
client application.
Note Clicking a URL (such as one in an -email message) in an application running over a Clientless SSL
VPN session does not open the site over that session. To open a site over the session, paste the URL
into the Enter Clientless SSL VPN (URL) Address field.
Note If you are using an IMAP client and you lose your mail server connection or are unable to make a new
connection, close the IMAP application and restart Clientless SSL VPN.
You must fulfill requirements for application access and other mail clients.
We have tested Microsoft Outlook Express versions 5.5 and 6.0.
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Use email Via Web Access
Note You must have the web-based email product installed and other web-based email
applications should also work, but we have not verified them.
See the instructions and examples for your mail application in Use Email over Clientless SSL VPN, on page
301.
• Smart tunnel requires either ActiveX or JRE on Windows and Java Web Start on Mac OS X.
• You must ensure cookies enabled on the browser.
• You must ensure JavaScript is enabled on the browser.
• Mac OS X does not support a front-side proxy.
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Use Smart Tunnel
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Use Smart Tunnel
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CHAPTER 18
Clientless SSL VPN with Mobile Devices
• Use Clientless SSL VPN with Mobile Devices, on page 373
Some differences in the mobile device version of Clientless SSL VPN exist:
• A banner Web page replaces the popup Clientless SSL VPN window.
• An icon bar replaces the standard Clientless SSL VPN floating toolbar. This bar displays the Go, Home
and Logout buttons.
• The Show Toolbar icon is not included on the main Clientless SSL VPN portal page.
• Upon Clientless SSL VPN logout, a warning message provides instructions for closing the PIE browser
properly. If you do not follow these instructions and you close the browser window in the common way,
PIE does not disconnect from Clientless SSL VPN or any secure website that uses HTTPS.
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Restrictions of Clientless SSL VPN with Mobile
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CHAPTER 19
Customizing Clientless SSL VPN
• Clientless SSL VPN End User Setup, on page 375
• Customize Bookmark Help, on page 385
Note A stateful failover does not retain sessions established using Application Access. Users must reconnect
following a failover.
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View the Floating Toolbar
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Export a Customization Template
When you export a customization object, an XML file containing XML tags is created at the URL you specify.
The XML file created by the customization object named Template contains empty XML tags and provides
the basis for creating new customization objects. This object cannot be changed or deleted from cache memory
but can be exported, edited, and imported back into the ASA as a new customization object.
Procedure
Step 1 Export a customization object and and make changes to the XML tags:
export webvpn customization
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Edit the Customization Template
The following figure shows the Logon page and its customizing XML tags. All these tags are nested within
the higher-level tag <auth-page>.
Figure 13: Logon Page and Associated XML Tags
The following figure shows the Language Selector drop-down list that is available on the Logon page, and
the XML tags for customizing this feature. All these tags are nested within the higher-level <auth-page> tag.
Figure 14: Language Selector on Logon Screen and Associated XML Tags
The following figure shows the Information Panel that is available on the Logon page, and the XML tags for
customizing this feature. This information can appear to the left or right of the login box. These tags are nested
within the higher-level <auth-page> tag.
Figure 15: Information Panel on Logon Screen and Associated XML Tags
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Import a Customization Object
The following figure shows the Portal page and the XML tags for customizing this feature. These tags are
nested within the higher-level <auth-page> tag.
Figure 16: Portal Page and Associated XML Tags
The following example shows importing the customization object General.xml from the URL
209.165.201.22/customization and naming it custom1:
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Apply Customizations to Connection Profiles, Group Policies, and Users
Note After you customize the portal pages, the changes do not take effect until you reload the ASA, or you disable
and then enable clientless SSL.
Procedure
Step 2 Switch to either tunnel-group, group-policy, or username Clientless SSL VPN configuration:
tunnel-group webvpn OR group-policy webvpn OR username webvpn
Step 3 Apply a customization to a connection profile with name as the name of a customization to apply to the
connection profile:
customization name
Or apply a customization to a group or user. The following options are included:
• none disables the customization for the group or user, prevents the value from being inherited, and
displays the default Clientless SSL VPN pages.
• value name is the name of a customization for a group or user.
Example:
This example enters tunnel-group Clientless SSL VPN configuration mode and enables the customization
cisco for the connection profile cisco_telecommutes:
hostname(config)# tunnel-group cisco_telecommuters webvpn-attributes
hostname(tunnel-group-webvpn)# customization cisco
This example enters group policy Clientless SSL VPN configuration mode, queries the security appliance for
a list of customizations, and enables the customization cisco for the group policy cisco_sales:
This example enters username Clientless SSL VPN configuration mode and enables the customization cisco
for the user cisco_employee:
hostname(config)# username cisco_employee attributes
hostname(config-username)# webvpn
hostname(config-username-webvpn)#customization value cisco
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Login Screen Advanced Customization
Step 4 (Optional) Remove the command from the configuration and remove a customization from the connection
profile:
[ no] customization name
Step 5 (Optional) Remove the command from the configuration and revert to the default:
[no] customization {none | value name}
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Login Screen Advanced Customization
The following figure shows the Language Selector drop-down list. This feature is an option for Clientless
SSL VPN users and is also called by a function in the HTML code of the login screen.
Figure 18: Language Selector Drop-down List
The following figure shows a simple example of a custom login screen enabled by the Full Customization
feature.
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Login Screen Advanced Customization
The following HTML code is used as an example and is the code that displays:
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=windows-1252">
<title>New Page 3</title>
<base target="_self">
</head>
<p align="center">
<img border="0" src="/+CSCOU+/cisco_logo.jpg" width="188" height="48"><font face="Snap ITC"
size="6" color="#FF00FF">
</font><font face="Snap ITC" color="#FF00FF" size="7"> </font><i><b><font color="#FF0000"
size="7" face="Sylfaen"> SSL VPN Service by the Cisco ASA5500</font></b></i></p>
<body onload="csco_ShowLoginForm('lform');csco_ShowLanguageSelector('selector')">
<table>
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Modify Your HTML File
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p>Loading...</p>
</div>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="251"></td>
<td width="1"></td>
<td align=right valign=right width="800">
<img border="1" src="/+CSCOU+/asa5500.jpg" width="660" height="220" align="middle">
</td></tr>
</table>
The indented code injects the Login form and the Language Selector on the screen. The function
csco_ShowLoginForm('lform') injects the logon form. csco_ShowLanguageSelector('selector') injects the
Language Selector.
Step 1 Name your file logon.inc. When you import the file, the ASA recognizes this filename as the logon screen.
Step 2 Modify the paths of images used by the file to include /+CSCOU+/.
Files that are displayed to remote users before authentication must reside in a specific area of the ASA cache
memory represented by the path /+CSCOU+/. Therefore, the source for each image in the file must include
this path.
For example:
src=”/+CSCOU+/asa5520.gif”
Step 3 Insert the special HTML code below. This code contains the Cisco functions, described earlier, that inject the
login form and language selector onto the screen.
<body onload="csco_ShowLoginForm('lform');csco_ShowLanguageSelector('selector')">
<table>
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Customize Bookmark Help
<td width="251"></td>
<td width="1"></td>
<td align=right valign=right width="800">
<img border="1" src="/+CSCOU+/asa5500.jpg" width="660" height="220" align="middle">
</td></tr>
</table>
Application Type Panel URL of Help File in Flash Help File Provided By
Memory of the Security Cisco in English?
Appliance
language is the abbreviation of the language rendered by the browser. This field is not used for file translation;
it indicates the language used in the file. To specify a particular language code, copy the language abbreviation
from the list of languages rendered by your browser. For example, a dialog window displays the languages
and associated language codes when you use one of the following procedures:
• Open Internet Explorer and choose Tools > Internet Options > Languages > Add.
• Open Mozilla Firefox and choose Tools > Options > Advanced > General, click Choose next to
Languages, and click Select a language to add.
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Import a Help file to Flash Memory
Import a help content file to flash memory for display in Clientless SSL VPN sessions.
import webvpn webcontent destination_url source_url
• destination_url is the string in the URL of Help File in Flash Memory of the Security Appliance column.
• source_url is the URL of the file to import. Valid prefixes are ftp://, http://, and tftp://.
Example
This example copies the help file app-access-help.inc to flash memory from the TFTP server at
209.165.200.225.The URL includes the abbreviation en for the English language:
Example
This example copies the English language help file file-access-hlp.inc displayed on the Browser
Networks panel to TFTP Server 209.165.200.225.
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Understand Language Translation
webvpn All the layer 7, AAA and portal messages that are not
customizable.
The ASA includes a translation table template for each domain that is part of standard functionality. The
templates for plug-ins are included with the plug-ins and define their own translation domains.
You can export the template for a translation domain, which creates an XML file of the template at the URL
you provide. The message fields in this file are empty. You can edit the messages and import the template to
create a new translation table object that resides in flash memory.
You can also export an existing translation table. The XML file created displays the messages you edited
previously. Reimporting this XML file with the same language name creates a new version of the translation
table object, overwriting previous messages.
Some templates are static, but some change based on the configuration of the ASA. Because you can customize
the logon and logout pages, portal page, and URL bookmarks for clientless users, the ASA generates the
customization and url-list translation domain templates dynamically, and the template automatically reflects
your changes to these functional areas.
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Create Translation Tables
After creating translation tables, they are available to customization objects that you create and apply to group
policies or user attributes. With the exception of the AnyConnect translation domain, a translation table has
no affect, and messages are not translated on user screens until you create a customization object, identify a
translation table to use in that object, and specify that customization for the group policy or user. Changes to
the translation table for the AnyConnect domain are immediately visible to AnyConnect client users.
Procedure
PortForwarder
url-list
webvpn
Citrix-plugin
RPC-plugin
Telnet-SSH-plugin
VNC-plugin
Translation Tables:
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Reference the Language in a Customization Object
"Report-Msgid-Bugs-To: [email protected]\n"
"POT-Creation-Date: 2007-03-12 18:57 GMT\n"
"PO-Revision-Date: YEAR-MO-DA HO:MI+ZONE\n"
"Last-Translator: FULL NAME <EMAIL@ADDRESS>\n"
"Language-Team: LANGUAGE <[email protected]>\n"
"MIME-Version: 1.0\n"
"Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8\n"
"Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit\n"
#: DfltCustomization:24 DfltCustomization:64
msgid "Clientless SSL VPN Service"
msgstr ""
customization
keepout
url-list
webvpn
Citrix-plugin
RPC-plugin
Telnet-SSH-plugin
VNC-plugin
Translation Tables:
es-us customization
If you import a translation table for the AnyConnect domain, your changes are effective immediately. If you
import a translation table for any other domain, you must create a customization object, identify the translation
table to use in that object, and specify that customization object for the group policy or user.
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Reference the Language in a Customization Object
Procedure
Step 1 Export a customization template to a URL where you can edit it.
export webvpn customization template
This example exports the template and creates the copy sales at the URL specified.
hostname# export webvpn customization template tftp://209.165.200.225/sales
Step 2 Two areas of XML code in the customization template pertain to translation tables. Edit the customization
template and reference the previously-imported translation table.
This example specifies the translation table to use.
• The <languages> tag in the XML code is followed by the names of the translation tables. In this example,
they are en, ja, zh, ru, and ua.
• The <default-language> tag specifies the language that the remote user first encounters when connecting
to the ASA. In the example code above, the language is English.
<localization>
<languages>en,ja,zh,ru,ua</languages>
<default-language>en</default-language>
</localization>
This example affects the display of the Language Selector and includes the <language selector> tag and the
associated <language> tags that enable and customize the Language Selector:
• The <language-selector> group of tags includes the <mode> tag that enables and disables the displaying
of the Language Selector and the <title> tag that specifies the title of the drop-down box listing the
languages.
• The <language> group of tags includes the <code> and <text> tags that map the language name displayed
in the Language Selector drop-down box to a specific translation table.
<auth-page>
....
<language-selector>
<mode>enable</mode>
<title l10n="yes">Language:</title>
<language>
<code>en</code>
<text>English</text>
</language>
<language>
<code>es-us</code>
<text>Spanish</text>
</language>
</language-selector>
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Change a Group Policy or User Attributes to Use the Customization Object
Procedure
Example
This example shows the customization object sales enabled in the group policy sales.
hostname(config)# group-policy sales attributes
hostname(config-group-policy)# webvpn
hostname(config-group-webvpn)# customization value sales
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CHAPTER 20
Clientless SSL VPN Troubleshooting
• Recover from Hosts File Errors When Using Application Access, on page 393
• WebVPN Conditional Debugging, on page 396
• Capture Data, on page 396
• Protect Clientless SSL VPN Session Cookies, on page 398
• The applications themselves may be switched off or malfunction, even when you are running them
locally.
These errors can result from terminating the Application Access window in any improper way. For example:
• Your browser crashes while you are using Application Access.
• A power outage or system shutdown occurs while you are using Application Access.
• You minimize the Application Access window while you are working, then shut down your computer
with the window active (but minimized).
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Understanding the Hosts File
When Application Access starts.... • Clientless SSL VPN copies the hosts file to
hosts.webvpn, thus creating a backup.
• Clientless SSL VPN then edits the hosts file,
inserting Clientless SSL VPN-specific
information.
When Application Access stops... • Clientless SSL VPN copies the backup file to
the hosts file, thus restoring the hosts file to its
original state.
• Clientless SSL VPN deletes hosts.webvpn.
Note Microsoft anti-spyware software blocks changes that the port forwarding Java applet makes to the hosts file.
See www.microsoft.com for information on how to allow hosts file changes when using anti-spyware software.
Procedure
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file after Application Access has shut down improperly, choose one of the other options, or edit the hosts
file manually.
Procedure
Step 1 Locate and edit your hosts file. The most common location is c:\windows\sysem32\drivers\etc\hosts.
Step 2 Check to see if any lines contain the string: # added by WebVpnPortForward If any lines contain this string,
your hosts file is Clientless SSL VPN-customized. If your hosts file is Clientless SSL VPN-customized, it
looks similar to the following example:
123.0.0.1 localhost
Step 3 Delete the lines that contain the string: # added by WebVpnPortForward
Step 4 Save and close the file.
Step 5 Start Clientless SSL VPN and log in.
Step 6 Click the Application Access link.
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WebVPN Conditional Debugging
If you configure more than one condition, the conditions are conjoined (ANDed), so that debugs are shown
only if all conditions are met.
After setting up the condition filter, use the base debug webvpn command to turn on the debug. Simply setting
the conditions does not enable the debug. Use the show debug and show webvpn debug-condition commands
to view the current state of debugging.
The following shows an example of enabling a conditional debug on the user jdoe.
Capture Data
The CLI capture command lets you log information about websites that do not display properly over a
Clientless SSL VPN session. This data can help your Cisco customer support engineer troubleshoot problems.
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Create a Capture File
Prerequisites
Enabling Clientless SSL VPN capture affects the performance of the security appliance. Ensure you switch
off the capture after you generate the capture files needed for troubleshooting.
Step 1 Start the capture utility for Clientless SSL VPN and create a capture named hr, which captures traffic for user2
to a file.
capture capture_name type webvpn user webvpn_username
capture_name is a name you assign to the capture, which is also prepended to the name of the capture files.
webvpn_user is the username to match for capture.
Example:
Step 2 (Optional) Stop the capture utility from capturing packets after a user has logged in and began a Clientless
SSL VPN session. The capture utility creates a capture_name.zip file, which is encrypted with the password
koleso.
no capture capture_name
Step 3 Send the .zip file to Cisco Systems or attach it to a Cisco TAC service request.
Step 4 Unzip the contents of the file using the koleso password.
Step 2 (Optional) Stop the capture utility from capturing packets after a user has logged in and began a Clientless
SSL VPN session.
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Protect Clientless SSL VPN Session Cookies
no capture capture_name
Step 3 Open a browser and display the capture named hr in a sniffer format:
https://asdm_enabled_interface_of_the_security_appliance:port/admin/capture/capture_name/pcap
Example:
https://192.0.2.1:60000/admin/capture/hr/pcap
To prevent a Clientless SSL VPN session cookie from being accessed by a third party through a client-side
script such as Javascript, perform the following steps:
Procedure
Enable the httponly flag for a Clientless SSL VPN session cookie. This is enabled by default.
http-only-cookie
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Example:
hostname(config)# webvpn
hostname(config-webvpn)# http-only-cookie
Note Use this command only if Cisco TAC advises you to do so. Enabling this command presents a
security risk because the Clientless SSL VPN features listed under the Guidelines section will not
work without any warning.
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