Hi
I can successfully configure an Avaya 9600 phone to VPN to a Sonicwall firewall and the phone connects and I have dialtone, buttons, etc. Everything works but I noted that the IP address of the phone was set to the local subnet as opposed to the Virtual DHCP range I have set which gets allocated to Global VPN clients (so I know it works).
Though everything appears to work it does not seem right to me that the phone does not have a virtual IP and if I use a Netgear UTM for example I get a Virtual IP allocated to the phone.
My general concern is that if we roll this out we will have users on similar subnets at home (i.e. 192.168.1.x) and this might confuse the system.
Everything I try to get the DHCP to pass down from the Sonicwall does not work and I have to have the client settings in the VPN set to Manual & DHCP for the VPN to connect.
I wonder what other people had experienced if they had got 9600 to connect (if they had ever bothered to look at the phones IP address !). It's quite a pain to get it working so probably once most people got a dialtone they were happy.
The old Avaya Tektip for setting up VPN phones with Sonicwalls was based upon 5600 phones that had manual Virtual IP settings and never used DHCP for this.
I can successfully configure an Avaya 9600 phone to VPN to a Sonicwall firewall and the phone connects and I have dialtone, buttons, etc. Everything works but I noted that the IP address of the phone was set to the local subnet as opposed to the Virtual DHCP range I have set which gets allocated to Global VPN clients (so I know it works).
Though everything appears to work it does not seem right to me that the phone does not have a virtual IP and if I use a Netgear UTM for example I get a Virtual IP allocated to the phone.
My general concern is that if we roll this out we will have users on similar subnets at home (i.e. 192.168.1.x) and this might confuse the system.
Everything I try to get the DHCP to pass down from the Sonicwall does not work and I have to have the client settings in the VPN set to Manual & DHCP for the VPN to connect.
I wonder what other people had experienced if they had got 9600 to connect (if they had ever bothered to look at the phones IP address !). It's quite a pain to get it working so probably once most people got a dialtone they were happy.
The old Avaya Tektip for setting up VPN phones with Sonicwalls was based upon 5600 phones that had manual Virtual IP settings and never used DHCP for this.