That's good to hear. Once that is operational, does it act like any other Tik?
Thanks Tyler ________________________________ From: Af <[email protected]> on behalf of Robbie Wright <[email protected]> Sent: Thursday, December 1, 2016 4:09 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [AFMUG] VPN in to AWS environment. CHR's work fine at AWS, we've tested them pretty extensively. Getting the routing tables and default gateways to work correctly at AWS is the bigger issue. You basically turn the CHR into a NAT instance in AWS parlance. Robbie Wright Siuslaw Broadband<https://siuslawbroadband.com> 541-902-5101 On Thu, Dec 1, 2016 at 2:02 PM, Tyler Treat <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: Ok folks - how about this scenario. Say i have a handful of servers in AWS EC2 that I would like to have software VPN access to from Phones, laptops, etc. (ie, this isn't a site to site vpn) For simplicity's sake, let's say this is a completely isolated environment. No "public" access to said servers. What would be the best method to accomplish this. From what I can see, AWS will not natively support a client VPN directly to a VPC. Could you turn up a Mikrotik CHR instance to serve this function? Would it work? Then scenario B: if you had both a local VMWare environment, and an AWS environment, would you be able to theoretically tunnel between CHR's on both sides? Or is this something that is outright disallowed in AWS? Thanks Tyler
