Hmmm... I've had bad luck with that in the past on dial up connections, so I
guess I've never tried that with VPN.

------------------------------------------------------
Roger D. Seielstad - MCSE
Sr. Systems Administrator
Inovis - Formerly Harbinger and Extricity
Atlanta, GA


> -----Original Message-----
> From: Andrew S. Baker [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
> Sent: Saturday, October 12, 2002 6:31 PM
> To: NT 2000 Discussions
> Subject: RE: AD naming
> 
> 
> That shouldn't be an issue if you deselect "Use Default 
> Gateway on Remote
> Network"
> 
> 
> 
> ==============================================================
>  ASB - http://www.ultratech-llc.com/KB/?File=~MoreInfo.TXT
> ==============================================================
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Roger Seielstad
> Sent: Friday, October 11, 2002 3:17 PM
> To: NT 2000 Discussions
> Subject: RE: AD naming
> 
> 
> I was talking more about the firewall rules portion - I guess 
> that's what I
> wasn't clear on.
> 
> The reason I don't like the built in VPN client is that it 
> doesn't support
> split tunnelling, so you're paying a bandwidth penalty for 
> all off-network
> directed traffic that gets instantiated.
> 
> ------------------------------------------------------
> Roger D. Seielstad - MCSE
> Sr. Systems Administrator
> Inovis - Formerly Harbinger and Extricity
> Atlanta, GA
> 
> 
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Ryan Malayter [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> > Sent: Friday, October 11, 2002 3:14 PM
> > To: NT 2000 Discussions
> > Subject: RE: AD naming
> >
> >
> > From: Roger Seielstad [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> > >That sounds like its working by design, unless I'm
> > >reading you wrong.
> >
> > It is indeed behaving as designed, which is exactly what PSS
> > told us and
> > why they provided no fix. The problem is that the design is, in my
> > opinion, very wrong. I feel that when a VPN session is initated, the
> > client should look at the remote DNS over the VPN first for name
> > resolution, then fall back to the plain-IP connection's DNS
> > if it fails.
> > Windows 2000/XP built-im VPN clients don't work this way, but, as
> > mentioned, many 3rd party VPN clients do.
> >
> > Ryan Malayter
> > Sr. Network & Database Administrator
> > Bank Administration Institute
> > Chicago, Illinois, USA
> > PGP Key: http://www.malayter.com/pgp-public.txt
> > :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
> > The greatest lesson in life is to know that even fools are right
> > sometimes.
> >      -Sir Winston S. Churchill
> >
> 
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