|
Home > Archive > VPN > December 2005 > Weird Loss of Connectivity Issue -- Help?
You are viewing an archived Text-only version of the thread.
To view this thread in it's original format and/or if you want to reply to
this thread please [click here]
| Author |
Weird Loss of Connectivity Issue -- Help?
|
|
| Kyle Stedman 2005-12-03, 5:47 pm |
| Hi,
I'm on a cable connection, running through a Linksys Cable Gateway.
I cannot connect to the Internet via web browser, but can connect in every
other way (ping, Usenet, E-mail, etc....).
But here's the rub: I use a cisco VPN client to connect to my office
servers. When the VPN client is installed on my machine (no vpn connection
initiated, just the client installed) I can usually browse normally. If I
lose my browsing ability, initiating a VPN connection restores it, and
keeps it restored for some time AFTER I drop the VPN connection.
If I uninstall the cisco VPN client, I lose all browser connectivity (but
all other connectivity remains fine).
It's not a DNS problem, because I can't reach sites via straight IP.
Indeed, I can't even connect to my Linksys Gateway via browser.
Any ideas would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Kyle
| |
| Mike Drechsler - SPAM PROTECTED EMAIL 2005-12-03, 5:47 pm |
| Kyle Stedman wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm on a cable connection, running through a Linksys Cable Gateway.
>
> I cannot connect to the Internet via web browser, but can connect in every
> other way (ping, Usenet, E-mail, etc....).
>
> But here's the rub: I use a cisco VPN client to connect to my office
> servers. When the VPN client is installed on my machine (no vpn connection
> initiated, just the client installed) I can usually browse normally. If I
> lose my browsing ability, initiating a VPN connection restores it, and
> keeps it restored for some time AFTER I drop the VPN connection.
>
> If I uninstall the cisco VPN client, I lose all browser connectivity (but
> all other connectivity remains fine).
>
> It's not a DNS problem, because I can't reach sites via straight IP.
> Indeed, I can't even connect to my Linksys Gateway via browser.
>
> Any ideas would be appreciated.
>
> Thanks,
> Kyle
You have a proxy server setting enabled in your browser. When the VPN
connection is working you can connect to the proxy server and your web
traffic works because the proxy server is accessable.
Go to Tools->Options. Connections tab, Click on Lan Settings. You can
disable and enable your proxy server setting from here. You may require
it to be on when you are connected to the VPN.
--
WARNING! Email address has been altered for spam resistance.
Please remove the -deletethispart-. section before replying directly.
Mike Drechsler (mike-newsgroup@-deletethispart-.upcraft.com)
| |
| Kyle Stedman 2005-12-03, 5:47 pm |
| Mike Drechsler - SPAM PROTECTED EMAIL
<mike-newsgroup@-DELETETHISPART-.upcraft.com> wrote in
news:Yvmkf.166554$7k1.7752@fe12.news.easynews.com:
> Kyle Stedman wrote:
>
> You have a proxy server setting enabled in your browser. When the VPN
> connection is working you can connect to the proxy server and your web
> traffic works because the proxy server is accessable.
>
> Go to Tools->Options. Connections tab, Click on Lan Settings. You
> can disable and enable your proxy server setting from here. You may
> require it to be on when you are connected to the VPN.
>
>
>
Hi,
Thanks for the tip. But no, no proxy settings in either my firefox or IE,
and initiating a vpn connection does not change these settings.
I've a feeling there's some corruption in my registry, perhaps in the
TCP/IP stack area. But I'm no expert. I've tried Microsoft's TCP/IP stack
reset (netsh int ip reset c:\resetlog.txt), with no luck.
Kyle
|
|
|
|
|