If the end point of the vpn is behind the router, is said router a) set up to allow for vpn passthrough, and b) forwarding udp/500 ( and sometimes tcp/500) traffic to the correct device?
Steve. On Thu, 06 Sep 2007 14:07:15 +1200 Kerry Mayes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Anything showing up in /var/log/messages ? > > > > tcpdump? > > appears that the linksys is failing to respond to my hails. > > > > > There is also a builtin vpn based on ipsec. > > http://www.ipcop.org/1.2.0/en/vpn/html/before-activating.html > > I'm trying to use IPCop's built in ipsec based vpn and the linksys' > built in ipsec based vpn functionality. Both imply that they are > generic ipsec but there's something going wrong. > > I've found that I was asking about the wrong linksys device as well. > The vpn is provided by the linksys rv042. I've found the manual for > that and found something under authentication, it says "the same IP > and FQDN can be used only for one tunnel connection." This may be my > problem as I was copying this info from another working connection. > I'll need to do some more research on this. > > Or, am I wasting my time trying to get an IPCop vpn to talk to a > linksys rv042 vpn?
