Always On VPN Ask Me Anything (AMA) June 2023

It’s that time again! Have questions about Always On VPN? Are you having a specific issue you can’t figure out? Need information about configuration options? Here’s your chance to get your questions answered! Join me next week on Thursday, June 29, 2023, at 10:00 AM PDT (UTC -7) for an opportunity to ask me anything (AMA!) about Microsoft Windows Always On VPN and related technologies.

Missed out on this event? You can find the session recording on YouTube here.

The AMA will be an open forum session where we can all talk shop about Always On VPN. It’s a great chance to learn new things and share experiences with your peers. We’ll discuss known issues and limitations, best practices, and more.

Everyone is welcome. Don’t miss out on this excellent opportunity to connect and learn. Register today!

Can’t make the session? Register anyway and I’ll send you the link to the recording as soon as it is availalbe!

Intune Certificate Connector Configuration Failed

Troubleshooting Always On VPN Error 691 and 812 – Part 2

The Microsoft Intune Certificate Connector must be deployed on-premises to provision and manage enterprise PKI certificates using Intune. The Intune Certificate Connector supports the deployment of SCEP, PKCS, PKCS imported certificates, or any combination of these. The connector can be configured to run under the SYSTEM account or optionally (and recommended) a domain service account. When using a service account, the service account must have permission to log on as a service on the server where the Intune Certificate Connector server.

Access is Denied

Even when all prerequisites are met, administrators may still find the installation of the Intune Certificate Connector fails with the following error message.

“Configuring Microsoft Intune Certificate Connector failed. No changes were made to Feature or Proxy settings. Please try again.”

“Unexpected Failure. Error: System.lnvalidOperationException: Cannot open PFXCertificateConnectorSvc service on computer ‘.’ System.ComponentModel.Win32Exception: Access is denied”

Workaround

After the connector installation fails, open the file explore and navigate to C:\Program Files\Microsoft Intune\PFXCertificateConnector\ConnectorUI. Right-click PFXCertificateConnectorUI.exe and choose ‘Run as administrator’.

Run through the connector installation wizard again, and it should install without issue.

To avoid this problem for future Intune Certificate Connector deployments, administrators can right-click the Intune Certificate Connector installer (IntuneCertificateConnector.exe) and choose ‘Run as administrator’.

Additional Information

Microsoft Intune Certificate Connector Configuration Failure (Part 1)

Microsoft Intune Certificate Connector Service Account and PKCS

Microsoft Intune Learning Resources for Always On VPN Admins

Microsoft Intune Certificate Connector Overview

Always On VPN April 2023 Security Updates

Heads up, Always On VPN administrators! This month’s patch Tuesday includes fixes for critical security vulnerabilities affecting Windows Server Routing and Remote Access Service (RRAS). Crucially there are remote code execution (RCE) vulnerabilities in the Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol (PPTP) (CVE-2023-28232), the Layer Two Tunneling Protocol (L2TP) (CVE-2023-28219, CVE-2023-28220), the Point-to-Point over Ethernet (PPPoE) protocol (CVE-2023-28224), and the Internet Key Exchange (IKE) protocol (CVE-2023-28238). The vulnerabilities in PPTP and L2TP are especially urgent as they allow an unauthenticated attacker to exploit them. There is also a denial-of-service (DoS) vulnerability (CVE-2023-28234) in the Secure Socket Tunneling Protocol (SSTP) protocol.

Exposure and Risk

The RCEs in PPTP, L2TP, and PPPoE should present limited risk as these protocols aren’t commonly used for Always On VPN (PPPoE and PPTP aren’t supported for Always On VPN, in fact). However, organizations may be using these protocols for other purposes. In addition, improperly configured edge firewalls could allow these connections even though administrators may not be actively using them. An attacker could also exploit these vulnerabilities with access to the RRAS server from the internal network.

Attack Surface Reduction

Always On VPN administrators are advised to ensure that only protocols and ports for VPN protocols in use are allowed through the edge firewall. Also, administrators should disable any unused protocols and services in RRAS to reduce the attack surface on their RRAS servers. To do this, open an elevated PowerShell command window on the RRAS server and run the following commands to disable support for the PPTP, L2TP, and PPPoE protocols.

netsh.exe ras set wanports device = “WAN Miniport (L2TP)” rasinonly = disabled ddinout = disabled ddoutonly = disabled maxports = 0

netsh.exe ras set wanports device = “WAN Miniport (PPTP)” rasinonly = disabled ddinout = disabled ddoutonly = disabled maxports = 1

netsh.exe ras set wanports device = “WAN Miniport (PPPOE)” ddoutonly = disabled

Restart-Service RemoteAccess -PassThru

Additional Vulnerabilities

This month’s update also includes fixes for other vulnerabilities that may impact Always On VPN deployments. Specifically, there are RCEs in Windows Network Address Translation (NAT) (CVE-2023-28217) and Windows Network Load Balancing (NLB) (CVE-2023-28240), and a DoS vulnerability in Windows Transport Layer Security (TLS) (CVE-2023-28234).

Update Now

Administrators should patch their RRAS servers as soon as possible to avoid potential compromise of the RRAS server in their environments.

Additional Information

Always On VPN SSTP Security Configuration