Re: VPN

From: Kevin Passey (kev@kdpsoftware1.demonnotrash.co.uk)
Date: 06/13/02


From: "Kevin Passey" <kev@kdpsoftware1.demonnotrash.co.uk>
Date: Thu, 13 Jun 2002 16:31:43 +0100

Hi I've set up VPN through SBS4.5 so I have a dedicated server running my
VPN server. The SBS server has two nic cards one for the internal stuff and
the other for the external VPN and SMTP server.

What you need to do is to certainly put two nic cards in the PC that is
going to be the server.

One of the nic cards needs to be assigned an external address - and you
associate the VPN server to that address and plug it into your router so the
world can access it. You should stealth this address so that only known
machines can get to it.

I hope this points you in the right direction.

Regards

Kev

"David Mahon" <news@amigo.co.uk> wrote in message
news:RH86a5A8K6B9Ewng@laptop.amigo.co.uk...
> I have the following setup:
>
> internet (ADSL)
> .
> router
> .
> firewall
> .
> switch
> .
> PCs
>
>
> I have a block of real IP addresses and the firewall is running in
> stealth mode (invisible to the network from both sides). Some incoming
> ports on one of the PC's are accessible (SMTP, HTTP, NNTP servers) and
> the rest are blocked.
>
> I have a laptop, which I would like to allow to connect to the network
> from a dial up ISP (via a dynamic IP allocation) when I am out and
> about. I would like to set up a VPN. The firewall, unfortunately, does
> not act as a VPN server, but will pass traffic through as will the
> router.
>
> I will have to run a VPN server on one of the PCs. From what I can
> understand from the Win2k server help file, that machine will need 2
> network cards.
>
> How should I attach the two network cards to my network? Just give them
> sequential IP addresses and attach them both directly to the switch?
>
> How do I tell the machine to only use one of the network cards for VPN
> traffic and the other for everything else but VPN traffic?
>
> Why can't I just do it with one network card?
> --
> David Mahon



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