That was my feeling too . . .put the server you want to VPN to inside the router instead of the DMZ, setup a DynDNS account and have the router autoupdate the DynDNS name (so you have a hostname that will resolve to VPN to, and have the router forward the VPN ports to the server. While I haven't set this up for VPN connections, I have set it up this way for remote access to servers at my house.
On Dec 17, 2010, at 12:48 AM, John Stalberg wrote: >> > > Well, you might be meening 'everything else? If not you drawing conlusions > here without proper bullet proof testing. > > My advice: if you can skip the router once for testing purpose, do it! > > It is obvious the VPN request doesn't reach the server if I understand what > you are saying about there is no sign of a VPN request on the server. I > assume the log files are without any trace of a VPN request. > > If this is true it is hard to not suspect the router. ----------------------------------------------- There are only three kinds of stress; your basic nuclear stress, cooking stress, and A$$hole stress. The key to their relationship is Jello. neil _______________________________________________ MacOSX-admin mailing list [email protected] http://www.omnigroup.com/mailman/listinfo/macosx-admin
