RE: [WIRELESS-LAN] Multiple VPN Connections through home router

2008-01-08 Thread Frank Bulk
Lee: This is a real issue that we have had with certain DSL modems. What you're describing is sometimes VPN Passthrough. Netgear is one of the few that clearly documents this: http://kbserver.netgear.com/kb_web_files/n101222.asp Regards, Frank From: Lee H Badman [mailto:[EMAIL

RE: [WIRELESS-LAN] Multiple VPN Connections through home router

2008-01-08 Thread Lee H Badman
Is Microsoft VPN, L2TP/IPSec. Lee H. Badman Wireless/Network Engineer Information Technology and Services Syracuse University 315 443-3003 From: Fishel Erps [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, January 08, 2008 3:13 PM To: WIRELESS-LAN@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU

Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Multiple VPN Connections through home router

2008-01-08 Thread Fishel Erps
Lee, What device on the inside of your network are the inbound VPN connections terminating on? Lee H Badman wrote: Not your typical WLAN question... We use L2TP/IPSec VPN for remote access into campus for home users, travelers, vendors, etc. Other than secure remote access, we

RE: [WIRELESS-LAN] Multiple VPN Connections through home router

2008-01-08 Thread Peter P Morrissey
Just because it is documented doesn't mean it works. You should know that. : ) I actually purchased the WGT624 which also clearly says in its documentation http://kbserver.netgear.com/datasheets/WGT624v2_Datasheet_13Feb2004.pdf that it supports multi-VPN pass-through. It does not work. I have

Re: [WIRELESS-LAN] Multiple VPN Connections through home router

2008-01-08 Thread Fishel Erps
Lee, Look into the Cisco ASA5505 as a home router/firewall alternative. You may also want to look into using them for LAN-to-LAN VPN Tunneling. That would eliminate the issue of multiple VPN pass-through. Lee H Badman wrote: Is Microsoft VPN, L2TP/IPSec. Lee H. Badman