Is the users laptop a domain machine? if not try the FQDN name of machine
you are trying to get to.

 

From: Aaron T. Rohyans [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, November 14, 2008 1:20 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: What could cause this VPN issue?

 

Could be a number of things really.. I'm assuming you're using GRE/PPTP?

 

1.             His provider could be blocking GRE (IP Protocol #47).  This
would allow the VPN to establish (via PPTP), but no traffic would pass as
GRE is being blocked.

2.             His router doesn't understand what GRE traffic is and is not
forwarding it (but again, the VPN gets established b/c PPTP rides over TCP
port 1723 - which all TCP/IP devices understand).

3.             In the case of IPSec VPNs, he could be using an IP address
for his physical NIC that overlaps with your corporate network.

4.             Your corporate network lacks a valid return route to get back
to VPN clients (probably not as you say it works for you just fine - but
just throwing it out there).

5.             He's using Vista and didn't sacrifice a chicken and sprinkle
Holy Water over it.

 

Hope this helps!

Aaron Rohyans 
IT Coordinator, IDC-USA 
 <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
317.244.8307 (V) 
317.244.4600 (F) 

  _____  

From: Evan Brastow [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, November 14, 2008 1:07 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: What could cause this VPN issue?

 

Hi guys,

 

I have a weird problem and I'm not sure where to start troubleshooting it.

 

I have a user that bought a new (Vista Ultimate) laptop. I am trying to set
up a VPN connection for them and have been going back and forth to their
house for the better part of the past week trying to get it working.

 

Basically, this user connects the same way I do with my laptop at home.
Through a wireless router, out to the Internet, in through our Netscreen,
and gets authenticated via our RRAS server. All IP info is assigned via
DHCP.

 

For me, I connect via the VPN, and I can then resolve names on the company
network and attach to server drives. For him, even though he has all the
permissions needed, he can't even resolve his computer name to connect via
RAdmin. 

 

The connection to the VPN works fine and the status in Network Connections
on his laptop indicates that he is connected successfully to the VPN, but I
can't seem to get any DNS services, even though I have it automatically
configured to get all IP and general DNS info via DHCP.

 

It's just so strange. the exact same settings work for me, but not him.
Could his router be somehow blocking DNS info but allowing him to connect to
the VPN? Doesn't seem like it could. It seems like once he establishes the
tunnel, anything should be allowed within that tunnel.

 

Any thoughts on what to try?

 

Thanks,

 

Evan

 

 

 

 

 

 

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