VPN profile options
Most of the VPN settings in Windows can be configured in VPN profiles using Microsoft Intune or Microsoft Configuration Manager. VPN settings can be configured using the ProfileXML node in the VPNv2 configuration service provider (CSP).
Note
If you're not familiar with CSPs, read Introduction to configuration service providers (CSPs) first.
The following table lists the VPN settings and whether the setting can be configured in Intune and Configuration Manager, or can only be configured using ProfileXML.
Profile setting | Can be configured in Intune and Configuration Manager |
---|---|
Connection type | Yes |
Routing: split-tunnel routes | Yes, except exclusion routes |
Routing: forced-tunnel | Yes |
Authentication (EAP) | Yes, if connection type is built in |
Conditional access | Yes |
Name resolution: NRPT | Yes |
Name resolution: DNS suffix | No |
Name resolution: persistent | No |
Auto-trigger: app trigger | Yes |
Auto-trigger: name trigger | Yes |
Auto-trigger: Always On | Yes |
Auto-trigger: trusted network detection | No |
LockDown | No |
Windows Information Protection (WIP) | Yes |
Traffic filters | Yes |
Proxy settings | Yes, by PAC/WPAD file or server and port |
Note
VPN proxy settings are only used on Force Tunnel Connections. On Split Tunnel Connections, the general proxy settings are used.
The ProfileXML node was added to the VPNv2 CSP to allow users to deploy VPN profile as a single blob. This node is useful for deploying profiles with features that aren't yet supported by MDMs. You can get more examples in the ProfileXML XSD article.
Sample Native VPN profile
The following sample is a sample Native VPN profile. This blob would fall under the ProfileXML node.
<VPNProfile>
<ProfileName>TestVpnProfile</ProfileName>
<NativeProfile>
<Servers>testServer.VPN.com</Servers>
<NativeProtocolType>IKEv2</NativeProtocolType>
<!--Sample EAP profile (PEAP)-->
<Authentication>
<UserMethod>Eap</UserMethod>
<Eap>
<Configuration>
<EapHostConfig xmlns="http://www.microsoft.com/provisioning/EapHostConfig">
<EapMethod>
<Type xmlns="http://www.microsoft.com/provisioning/EapCommon">25</Type>
<VendorId xmlns="http://www.microsoft.com/provisioning/EapCommon">0</VendorId>
<VendorType xmlns="http://www.microsoft.com/provisioning/EapCommon">0</VendorType>
<AuthorId xmlns="http://www.microsoft.com/provisioning/EapCommon">0</AuthorId>
</EapMethod>
<Config xmlns="http://www.microsoft.com/provisioning/EapHostConfig">
<Eap xmlns="http://www.microsoft.com/provisioning/BaseEapConnectionPropertiesV1">
<Type>25</Type>
<EapType xmlns="http://www.microsoft.com/provisioning/MsPeapConnectionPropertiesV1">
<ServerValidation>
<DisableUserPromptForServerValidation>true</DisableUserPromptForServerValidation>
<ServerNames></ServerNames>
<TrustedRootCA>d2 d3 8e ba 60 ca a1 c1 20 55 a2 e1 c8 3b 15 ad 45 01 10 c2 </TrustedRootCA>
<TrustedRootCA>d1 76 97 cc 20 6e d2 6e 1a 51 f5 bb 96 e9 35 6d 6d 61 0b 74 </TrustedRootCA>
</ServerValidation>
<FastReconnect>true</FastReconnect>
<InnerEapOptional>false</InnerEapOptional>
<Eap xmlns="http://www.microsoft.com/provisioning/BaseEapConnectionPropertiesV1">
<Type>13</Type>
<EapType xmlns="http://www.microsoft.com/provisioning/EapTlsConnectionPropertiesV1">
<CredentialsSource>
<CertificateStore>
<SimpleCertSelection>true</SimpleCertSelection>
</CertificateStore>
</CredentialsSource>
<ServerValidation>
<DisableUserPromptForServerValidation>true</DisableUserPromptForServerValidation>
<ServerNames></ServerNames>
<TrustedRootCA>d2 d3 8e ba 60 ca a1 c1 20 55 a2 e1 c8 3b 15 ad 45 01 10 c2 </TrustedRootCA>
<TrustedRootCA>d1 76 97 cc 20 6e d2 6e 1a 51 f5 bb 96 e9 35 6d 6d 61 0b 74 </TrustedRootCA>
</ServerValidation>
<DifferentUsername>false</DifferentUsername>
<PerformServerValidation xmlns="http://www.microsoft.com/provisioning/EapTlsConnectionPropertiesV2">true</PerformServerValidation>
<AcceptServerName xmlns="http://www.microsoft.com/provisioning/EapTlsConnectionPropertiesV2">false</AcceptServerName>
<TLSExtensions xmlns="http://www.microsoft.com/provisioning/EapTlsConnectionPropertiesV2">
<FilteringInfo xmlns="http://www.microsoft.com/provisioning/EapTlsConnectionPropertiesV3">
<EKUMapping>
<EKUMap>
<EKUName>AAD Conditional Access</EKUName>
<EKUOID>1.3.6.1.4.1.311.87</EKUOID>
</EKUMap>
</EKUMapping>
<ClientAuthEKUList Enabled="true">
<EKUMapInList>
<EKUName>AAD Conditional Access</EKUName>
</EKUMapInList>
</ClientAuthEKUList>
</FilteringInfo>
</TLSExtensions>
</EapType>
</Eap>
<EnableQuarantineChecks>false</EnableQuarantineChecks>
<RequireCryptoBinding>true</RequireCryptoBinding>
<PeapExtensions>
<PerformServerValidation xmlns="http://www.microsoft.com/provisioning/MsPeapConnectionPropertiesV2">true</PerformServerValidation>
<AcceptServerName xmlns="http://www.microsoft.com/provisioning/MsPeapConnectionPropertiesV2">false</AcceptServerName>
</PeapExtensions>
</EapType>
</Eap>
</Config>
</EapHostConfig>
</Configuration>
</Eap>
</Authentication>
<!--Sample routing policy: in this case, this is a split tunnel configuration with two routes configured-->
<RoutingPolicyType>SplitTunnel</RoutingPolicyType>
<DisableClassBasedDefaultRoute>true</DisableClassBasedDefaultRoute>
</NativeProfile>
<Route>
<Address>192.168.0.0</Address>
<PrefixSize>24</PrefixSize>
</Route>
<Route>
<Address>10.10.0.0</Address>
<PrefixSize>16</PrefixSize>
</Route>
<!--VPN will be triggered for the two apps specified here-->
<AppTrigger>
<App>
<Id>Microsoft.MicrosoftEdge_8wekyb3d8bbwe</Id>
</App>
</AppTrigger>
<AppTrigger>
<App>
<Id>C:\windows\system32\ping.exe</Id>
</App>
</AppTrigger>
<!--Example of per-app VPN. This configures traffic filtering rules for two apps. Internet Explorer is configured for force tunnel, meaning that all traffic allowed through this app must go over VPN. Microsoft Edge is configured as split tunnel, so whether data goes over VPN or the physical interface is dictated by the routing configuration.-->
<TrafficFilter>
<App>
<Id>%ProgramFiles%\Internet Explorer\iexplore.exe</Id>
</App>
<Protocol>6</Protocol>
<LocalPortRanges>10,20-50,100-200</LocalPortRanges>
<RemotePortRanges>20-50,100-200,300</RemotePortRanges>
<RemoteAddressRanges>30.30.0.0/16,10.10.10.10-20.20.20.20</RemoteAddressRanges>
<RoutingPolicyType>ForceTunnel</RoutingPolicyType>
</TrafficFilter>
<TrafficFilter>
<App>
<Id>Microsoft.MicrosoftEdge_8wekyb3d8bbwe</Id>
</App>
<LocalAddressRanges>3.3.3.3/32,1.1.1.1-2.2.2.2</LocalAddressRanges>
</TrafficFilter>
<!--Name resolution configuration. The AutoTrigger node configures name-based triggering. In this profile, the domain "hrsite.corporate.contoso.com" triggers VPN.-->
<DomainNameInformation>
<DomainName>hrsite.corporate.contoso.com</DomainName>
<DnsServers>1.2.3.4,5.6.7.8</DnsServers>
<WebProxyServers>5.5.5.5</WebProxyServers>
<AutoTrigger>true</AutoTrigger>
</DomainNameInformation>
<DomainNameInformation>
<DomainName>.corp.contoso.com</DomainName>
<DnsServers>10.10.10.10,20.20.20.20</DnsServers>
<WebProxyServers>100.100.100.100</WebProxyServers>
</DomainNameInformation>
<!--EDPMode is turned on for the enterprise ID "corp.contoso.com". When a user accesses an app with that ID, VPN will be triggered.-->
<EdpModeId>corp.contoso.com</EdpModeId>
<RememberCredentials>true</RememberCredentials>
<!--Always On is turned off, and triggering VPN for the apps and domain name specified earlier in the profile will not occur if the user is connected to the trusted network "contoso.com".-->
<AlwaysOn>false</AlwaysOn>
<DnsSuffix>corp.contoso.com</DnsSuffix>
<TrustedNetworkDetection>contoso.com</TrustedNetworkDetection>
<Proxy>
<Manual>
<Server>HelloServer</Server>
</Manual>
<AutoConfigUrl>Helloworld.Com</AutoConfigUrl>
</Proxy>
<!--Device compliance is enabled and an alternate certificate is specified for domain resource authentication.-->
<DeviceCompliance>
<Enabled>true</Enabled>
<Sso>
<Enabled>true</Enabled>
<Eku>This is my Eku</Eku>
<IssuerHash>This is my issuer hash</IssuerHash>
</Sso>
</DeviceCompliance>
</VPNProfile>
Sample plug-in VPN profile
The following sample is a sample plug-in VPN profile. This blob would fall under the ProfileXML node.
<VPNProfile>
<ProfileName>TestVpnProfile</ProfileName>
<PluginProfile>
<ServerUrlList>testserver1.contoso.com;testserver2.contoso..com</ServerUrlList>
<PluginPackageFamilyName>JuniperNetworks.JunosPulseVpn_cw5n1h2txyewy</PluginPackageFamilyName>
<CustomConfiguration><pulse-schema><isSingleSignOnCredential>true</isSingleSignOnCredential></pulse-schema></CustomConfiguration>
</PluginProfile>
<Route>
<Address>192.168.0.0</Address>
<PrefixSize>24</PrefixSize>
</Route>
<Route>
<Address>10.10.0.0</Address>
<PrefixSize>16</PrefixSize>
</Route>
<AppTrigger>
<App>
<Id>Microsoft.MicrosoftEdge_8wekyb3d8bbwe</Id>
</App>
</AppTrigger>
<AppTrigger>
<App>
<Id>%ProgramFiles%\Internet Explorer\iexplore.exe</Id>
</App>
</AppTrigger>
<TrafficFilter>
<App>
<Id>%ProgramFiles%\Internet Explorer\iexplore.exe</Id>
</App>
<Protocol>6</Protocol>
<LocalPortRanges>10,20-50,100-200</LocalPortRanges>
<RemotePortRanges>20-50,100-200,300</RemotePortRanges>
<RemoteAddressRanges>30.30.0.0/16,10.10.10.10-20.20.20.20</RemoteAddressRanges>
<!--<RoutingPolicyType>ForceTunnel</RoutingPolicyType>-->
</TrafficFilter>
<TrafficFilter>
<App>
<Id>Microsoft.MicrosoftEdge_8wekyb3d8bbwe</Id>
</App>
<LocalAddressRanges>3.3.3.3/32,1.1.1.1-2.2.2.2</LocalAddressRanges>
</TrafficFilter>
<TrafficFilter>
<App>
<Id>Microsoft.MicrosoftEdge_8wekyb3d8bbwe</Id>
</App>
<Claims>O:SYG:SYD:(A;;CC;;;AU)</Claims>
<!--<RoutingPolicyType>SplitTunnel</RoutingPolicyType>-->
</TrafficFilter>
<DomainNameInformation>
<DomainName>corp.contoso.com</DomainName>
<DnsServers>1.2.3.4,5.6.7.8</DnsServers>
<WebProxyServers>5.5.5.5</WebProxyServers>
<AutoTrigger>false</AutoTrigger>
</DomainNameInformation>
<DomainNameInformation>
<DomainName>corp.contoso.com</DomainName>
<DnsServers>10.10.10.10,20.20.20.20</DnsServers>
<WebProxyServers>100.100.100.100</WebProxyServers>
</DomainNameInformation>
<!--<EdpModeId>corp.contoso.com</EdpModeId>-->
<RememberCredentials>true</RememberCredentials>
<AlwaysOn>false</AlwaysOn>
<DnsSuffix>corp.contoso.com</DnsSuffix>
<TrustedNetworkDetection>contoso.com,test.corp.contoso.com</TrustedNetworkDetection>
<Proxy>
<Manual>
<Server>HelloServer</Server>
</Manual>
<AutoConfigUrl>Helloworld.Com</AutoConfigUrl>
</Proxy>
</VPNProfile>
Apply ProfileXML using Intune
After you configure the settings that you want using ProfileXML, you can create a custom profile in the Microsoft Intune admin center. After it's created, you deploy this profile to your devices.
Sign in to the Microsoft Intune admin center.
Select Devices > Configuration profiles > Create profile.
Enter the following properties:
- Platform: Select Windows 10 and later
- Profile: Select Templates > Custom.
Select Create.
In Basics, enter the following properties:
- Name: Enter a descriptive name for the profile. Name your profiles so you can easily identify them later.
- Description: Enter a description for the profile. This setting is optional, but recommended.
Select Next.
In Configuration settings, enter the following properties:
- OMA-URI: Enter
./user/vendor/MSFT/VPNv2/Your_VPN profile name_/ProfileXML
. - Data type: Select
String (XML file)
. - Value: Browse to, and select your XML file.
For more information on these settings, see Use custom settings for Windows devices in Intune.
- OMA-URI: Enter
Select Next, and continue configuring the policy. For the specific steps and recommendations, see Create a profile with custom settings in Intune.
Learn more
- Create VPN profiles to connect to VPN servers in Intune
- VPNv2 configuration service provider (CSP) reference
- How to Create VPN Profiles in Configuration Manager