All,

We've got a Lync 2010 infrastructure set up, but it's doing one little
thing that I'm not liking.

The server has two NICs - each in a different subnet. One is in the
same subnet as the rest of our servers. The other is in a subnet that
sits between our L3 switch and our firewall - it's not a DMZ.

I didn't set this up, but I was told that the intention was to set up
the second connection in the DMZ at the appropriate time for external
access - that hasn't happened yet, and I wasn't involved in the
install, and know little to nothing about Lync.

The behavior I'm seeing is that I cannot ping the interface that's on
the server subnet at all, including from machines on that subnet (I
can't RDP to that IP address either). The name of the Lync server
resolves to an IP address, and which one you get depends on the state
of DNS - you might get back the one for the server subnet, or you
might get back the other address. I can ping the other address just
fine.

So, where I'm going with this is: Both NICs have default gateways
assigned, and in my experience, that's a largish mistake - only one
interface should have a DG. I suspect this is causing some other
problems that we are seeing as well

However, the fellow who set this up swears that if I remove the DG
from either NIC, Lync will break.

So, do any of you here know enough about Lync to say if having only
one DG will break it?

Thanks,

Kurt

~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
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