That's a standalone setting. You don't want the frickin' package
(which as Chris mentioned, may be broken anyway) if you use this
setting.
--Bill
On Nov 19, 2007 12:06 PM, Luciano Areal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi Bill!
>
> The pfSense box is in front of the PPTP server. In other ways, it wi
Luciano Areal wrote:
Hi Bill!
The pfSense box is in front of the PPTP server. In other ways, it will act
as the main gateway, and the PPTP server will be on the LAN. Clients will
access it from WAN, passing through the pfSense box.
I just did what you said. Removed all rules from NAT and firewa
Hi Bill!
The pfSense box is in front of the PPTP server. In other ways, it will act
as the main gateway, and the PPTP server will be on the LAN. Clients will
access it from WAN, passing through the pfSense box.
I just did what you said. Removed all rules from NAT and firewall using
PPTP/GRE, and
I'm not sure, based on your email, if the pfSense box is in front of
the PPTP server or not. If t is, then go to the VPN menu, select
PPTP, on "Configuration" tab, select "Redirect incoming PPTP
connections to:" radio button and fill in the text box ("PPTP
redirection") with the IP address of your
Luciano Areal wrote:
Then, I tried to connect from home to my server, putting its WAN IP on my
VPN connection, but when I try to connect, nothing happens.
Am I doing anything wrong here? Did I forget any point here? I tried to get
some info on pfSense mail discussion archives, but didn't find an
Good morning, folks!
Here in my company, we have this network scenario:
Our network has one internal VPN server, based on a Windows 2003 Enterprise,
using PPTP and GRE protocol. We have several workers who eventually need to
connect in our network, to get some data and disconnect. Sometimes, the