A means of establishing an outbound-connection through a firewall in such a way that it is
neither blocked nor monitored. If a cracker
has compromised a machine on the other side of a firewall, a tunnel will allow
the cracker to communicate with that machine from the Internet. More generally, a tunnel is a path established
by one network to send its data via another networkÂ’s connections. Tunneling
works by encapsulating a network protocol within packets carried by the second
network. For example, MicrosoftÂ’s PPTP technology allows organizations to send
information across a virtual private network (VPN) using the Internet as a
transport medium. Tunneling is accomplished by embedding its own network
protocol within the TCP/IP packets carried by the Internet.
See Also:
Cracker; Encapsulation; Firewall; Internet; PPTP; TCP/IP; VPN.
Graham, R. Hacking Lexicon. [Online, 2001.] Robert Graham Website.
http://www.linuxsecurity.com/resource_files/documentation/hacking-dict.html.