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Hello Everyone,Has anyone else come up against this problem?We have a client who has two ISP subnets at their head office (leased line and satellite broadband). I have been trying to establish a VPN tunnel between the head office PIX (PIX1) and a rem...
Hello I can't find it now but I have read somewhere in the Cisco documentation that access lists for IPSec tunnels cannot be restricted to specific protocols and/or ports. You can specify IP only as I recall. This may well be your problem. You will h...
Hello,You may run into routing issues. If you dedicate one interface for Internet access then that interface should have the default route. If your VPN clients are coming in on the second interface from anywhere, then for the ISAKMP negotiation to su...
Hello amashau,I do not think this can be done, by why would you want to anyway? Once the "client" PIX has connected to the "server" PIX, it will be devices attached behind the PIXs that communicate, with the PIXs (in effect) acting as routers - hence...
Hello NatalieI have had a number of issues with VPN over GPRS here in the UK, albeit with Orange not Vodafone, but hopefully the following pointers will help.Can you ping or otherwise access the PIX or Internet from the 3G dialup connection? Not all ...
Hello Warren,I've implemented a tunnel in the scenario you describe.The VPN tunnel was between a 3005 concentrator and a PIX 501 using IPSec. The PIX was configured to use PPPoE on the external interface. The PIX was connected to a DLink302G (I think...