Figure 12-4: Define connection name and description
Each connection on a host machine must have a unique name. The same name can be used for all users in a group who don’t share a computer. If the users are configuring this unique name, the name and description might be defined by the network administrator to reduce any possible user doubt. Both the name and description can contain spaces and neither is case-sensitive. When the entries are complete, click the NEXT button.
Figure 12-5: Using an IP address to define a VPN head-end device
After typing the host name or IP address of the remote VPN device, click the NEXT button. The third New Connection Entry Wizard dialog box appears, asking for either the group information supplied by the network administrator or the digital certificate to be used to authenticate this client. Figure 12-6 shows an example of choosing group authentication. Notice the group name is displayed in Cleartext, but the passwords are masked for security. What isn’t so obvious is that all three entries are case-sensitive. When the entries are complete, click the NEXT button.
Figure 12-6: Entering the IPSec group and password
Figure 12-7 shows the fourth and final New Connection Entry Wizard dialog box. The BACK button can be used to change earlier entries or the FINISH button can complete the process. When the final dialog box closes, the new connection entry now appears in the Connection Entry drop-down list on the VPN Client’s main dialog box.
Figure 12-7: Final New Connection Entry Wizard dialog box
Figure 12-11 shows how to customize the connection and the available options. From copying (cloning) the connection settings, to deleting it, to launching third-party applications, this tool offers some useful options. A new feature is support for the following personal firewalls (in addition to PIX support).