Hi,

I am trying to configure PopTop on my OpenBSD Current system.  Yes, I 
know it's not secure, but given the situation, I do not have a choice.
OpenBSD 5.1-current (GENERIC.MP) #253: Thu Apr 26 01:45:24 MDT 2012

Everything has been installed from packages in the snapshot.

In the pptd.conf(5) man page, it mentions:

    ROUTING CHECKLIST - PROXYARP
            Allocate a section of your LAN addresses for use by clients.

            In /etc/ppp/options.pptpd. set the proxyarp option.  In
    pptpd.conf do
            not set localip option, but set remoteip to the allocated
    address
            range.  Enable kernel forwarding of packets, (e.g. using
            /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward ).

Therefore, I just have "remoteip 192.168.123.200-210"  in the config 
file, and 200-210 is blocked (reserved) on my DHCP server and I have not 
put in a "localip".

The directions that come with the poptop package 
(/usr/local/share/doc/pkg-readmes/poptop-1.3.4p3) indicate:

    In ppp.conf create a section pptp

         pptp:

             enable proxy
             set dns IP.Of.DNS.Server1 IP.Of.DNS.Server2
             set ifaddr _*Local.IP *_Remote.IP
             set timeout 0

So... what am I missing here?

Or should I just be using "Routing" (per pptpd.conf(5)) and..

    ROUTING CHECKLIST - FORWARDING
            Allocate a subnet for the clients that is routable from your
    LAN, but
            is not part of your LAN.

If I do that, I could create a 192.168.124.0/24 network on my OpenBSD 
server which I presume tun0 would belong to.  Would the other end of the 
tunnel (the Windows system) go into another subnet (eg: 192.168.125.0/24)?

Googling least to a plethora of Linux "HOWTO's", none of which really 
explain anything...

Confused in Windows networking land :(  Any assistance appreciated!

Thanks,
Steve Williams

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