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Cannot browse virtual network but can connect HELP

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abbycar223

Technical User
May 18, 2009
3
AU
Hi, this is driving me absolutely nuts. I am new to VPN so please be patient. I have a Windows Server 2008 system as a server connected to a work LAN on a Bigpong modem router. It can access the internal network fine. I have allowed access for VPN and PPTP ports through the router ok. My client machine at home is running Vista. It can connect to the VPN successfully but I am not able to browse any network folders or computers. It's all set up with a WORKGROUP network and PPTP. I have a static IP address for the work network from the ISP, I have a static IP address for the server on the LAN. What am I missing? How can I see the network and map the shared folders? Please help me?
 
Is your client machine using a different IP scope than your LAN? If its using the same scope you'll have issues. If your using 192.168.1.xxx for your LAN try 192.168.0.xxx for your client machine.

Hope this helps.

Please help us help you. Read FAQ690-6594: How to ask the best questions and site policies before posting.
 
The server public ip is 58.134.11.xxx, the server's lan ip is static 10.0.0.x. My client ip is 192.16.0.x. So this shouldn't conflict from what i have read.
However, when I do successfully connect to the vpn and click on the details of the connection, is has both the client and the server ip as 10.0.0.2 - why would this be when both are set to different ip addresses?
 
Once you connect to the VPN then you will have a LAN IP address however it shouldn't be the same IP address as your server.

You need to set the VPN to issue IPs in a slightly different range than your local LAN.

We use -

192.168.0.1 - Gateway
192.168.0.10 - 192.168.0.39 - Servers
192.168.0.40 - 192.168.0.49 - Printers
192.168.0.50 - 192.168.0.59 - Mail servers (we only have one mail server at the moment, but there's room for expansion)
192.168.0.100 - 192.168.0.199 - Clients
192.168.0.200 - 192.168.0.224 - VPN

Before anyone mentions it, I know that 192.168.0.xxx isn't the best address scheme for an office as that's what most home networks use however I inherited the addressing and it is easier to change the home network addressing for the few users who do VPN in.

Hope this helps.

Please help us help you. Read FAQ690-6594: How to ask the best questions and site policies before posting.
 
Can you explain how to set the VPN to issue IPs in a different range to my local LAN? Not sure how to go about doing this. That does make sense though - thank you. much appreciated
 
I've never installed a VPN server on Windows Server 2008. We have our VPN server on our hardware firewall. We're a 2003 domain and I don't have access to a 2008 server. This TechNet article might contain some helpful information.


Hope this helps.

Please help us help you. Read FAQ690-6594: How to ask the best questions and site policies before posting.
 
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