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#1
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Hi,
Have a stupid question ... We have a vpn at work using a cisco Pix and the network has an ip range of 192.168.1.1, etc ... I have several users who are logging into the vpn from home computers. Some of these computers I have had to change the ip address range to be different then the work network range to avoid conflict ... I would use 192.168.0.1 range This seems to work ok so far ... have a question on the effects of several home users logging in with the same ip address though. What happens when several home users that have been assigned 192.168.0.1 by their home routers all log into the vpn at the same time? Does this create any conflicts or is this not even a factor when using vpn? thanks, JL |
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#2
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Hi,
jslarose@cheerful.com wrote: > We have a vpn at work using a cisco Pix and the > network has an ip range of 192.168.1.1, etc ... My condolences... > I have several users who are logging into the vpn > from home computers. Some of these computers I > have had to change the ip address range to be different > then the work network range to avoid conflict ... ....right. It might not be a bad idea to renumber the office now. As you grow, getting remote users to reconfigure will become too much of a hassle and renumbering will only get harder, too. The private address space ( http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1918.html ) is plenty wide and there is no justification for half the planet using the same address block. Be original. ![]() > What happens when several home users that have been > assigned 192.168.0.1 by their home routers all log into the > vpn at the same time? Does this create any conflicts or is > this not even a factor when using vpn? It should be perfectly fine. The only address seen on your network and to other users will be their VPN endpoint. -- Chris Priede |
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#3
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thanks for the reply ...
Wasn't quite sure what it would do. What I did find out was that the home users could not use the 192.168.1.x range ... it would allow the vpn to connect but no traffic would actually pass. The problem was fixed once I moved the home users onto the 192.168.0.x range. Just wanted to make sure that if they happened to all have the same address on their home machine that it wouldn't create an issue ... I guess it wouldn't if it got natted to the wan of the router Although it is a good idea, I'm not sure I want to take on renumbering the office just yet. Thanks for the ideas .... |
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#4
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> Wasn't quite sure what it would do. What I did find out was that the
> home users could not use the 192.168.1.x range ... it would allow the > vpn to connect but no traffic would actually pass. The problem was > fixed once I moved the home users onto the 192.168.0.x range. Just > wanted to make sure that if they happened to all have the same address > on their home machine that it wouldn't create an issue ... I guess it > wouldn't if it got natted to the wan of the router > > Although it is a good idea, I'm not sure I want to take on renumbering > the office just yet. Thanks for the ideas .... No need to renumber Office network (192.168.1.x). Just continue to make sure User's home routers are not using same network. Every VPN connection from user's home machine will get a different IP (from a VPN pool) like 192.168.1.240, 192.168.1.241, etc. So there is no conflict. |
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