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UDP-ESP Encapsulation Types

[The IPsec Task Offload feature is deprecated and should not be used.]

The following figure shows the UDP encapsulation of Internet Key Exchange (IKE) packets and ESP-protected data packets that are received on port 4500.

diagram illustrating the basic udp-esp encapsulation for port 4500.

Note the four bytes of zeros that follow the UDP header in IKE packets. This field of zeros differentiates IKE packets from UDP-encapsulated ESP packets on port 4500. Instead of zeros, ESP headers have a nonzero ESP header at this location in the packet.

UDP-ESP Encapsulation Subtypes

ESP packets on port 4500 can be formatted according to one of the following UDP-ESP encapsulation subtypes:

  • UDP-encapsulated transport.

    An ESP-encapsulated transport-mode packet is encapsulated by UDP.

  • UDP-encapsulated tunnel.

    The tunnel-mode portion of a packet is UDP-encapsulated. The transport-mode portion of the packet is not UDP-encapsulated and is not ESP-protected.

  • Transport over UDP-encapsulated tunnel.

    The tunnel-mode portion of a packet is UDP-encapsulated. The transport-mode portion of a packet is not UDP-encapsulated, but is ESP-protected.

  • UDP-encapsulated transport over tunnel.

    The tunnel-mode portion of a packet is not UDP-encapsulated. The transport-mode portion of a packet is UDP-encapsulated and ESP-protected.

Note that a UDP-encapsulated transport over a UDP-encapsulated tunnel is not a supported encapsulation subtype.

The following figure shows the UDP-ESP encapsulation subtypes for port 4500.

diagram illustrating the udp-esp encapsulation subtypes for port 4500.