We are using SunRays in a WAN setting which has several nodes for people that work from home. In these instances we have a dedicated tunnel, running from a Linksys router (running the latest dd-Wrt version) at their home to another one at the closest SRSS cluster. I believe we also tunnel between our different SRSS clusters with the same setup.
We're using PPTP tunnels that are completely administered through the dd-Wrt firmware; I believe that it's spawning an openvpn process to actually handle the routing in the dd-Wrt linux environment. At the point of the home terminals, once this tunnel is set up all we have to do is connect the SunRay to the router and the connection is automatically made (with the normal round-robin load balancing) to the servers in the cluster they're routed to. I can't vouch for the security or sustainability of this setup; I don't usually handle the setup or administration of these network settings, but if you've got any more specific questions I can probably find out what we use for a solution in the specific instance. Not sure how relevant it will be to your setup, however, with the Gobi 7 and Cisco router. Hope this helps a little bit. Damon Getsman http://www.lookupanyone.com/namelistings/damon-getsman-andrew-getson.html ITrx Hi all, > > i am trying to setup a VPN connection with SunRays. With my test > system i am > using a Gobi 7 and a Cisco ASA5505 router. > > I am normally using SunRay server with a dedicated network. I read in > several > postings, that i have to use a shared network for VPN. > > When i am playing with a dedicated network my Gobi stoped at 26B. And > i can see > via snoop there is traffic. So i think, it must be possible to use a > dedicated network for VPN - perhaps. > > Has anyone here setup a VPN connection with a dedicated network? > In which way? > > Thank you for any hints. > > Detlev
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