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Home > Archive > VPN > February 2006 > Accesing local resources
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Accesing local resources
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| pablo.chemes@gmail.com 2006-02-07, 7:47 am |
| Hi, when I open a VPN tunnel with my employer, I can no longer see my
local area network.
I heard there's a registry hack to allow split tunneling. Does someone
knows about it ?
(I'm using Nortel Contivity Client to connect to my company's vpn
server.)
Is there any other known hacks I could try ?
thanks,
pablo
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| Bill Davidsen 2006-02-10, 5:47 pm |
| pablo.chemes@gmail.com wrote:
> Hi, when I open a VPN tunnel with my employer, I can no longer see my
> local area network.
>
> I heard there's a registry hack to allow split tunneling. Does someone
> knows about it ?
> (I'm using Nortel Contivity Client to connect to my company's vpn
> server.)
>
> Is there any other known hacks I could try ?
Some vpn's provide just access to certain nets, others want to be the
only thing you can use. If your employer wants it that way I'd be
careful about have connectivity to both internal and open net at the
same time.
We connect sites and portable systems, but it's all between systems
running heavy duty firewalling, and controlling what's visible where. It
sounds as if you behave as just another single machine on the private
net, that's a valid mode of operation.
--
bill davidsen <davidsen@tmr.com>
CTO TMR Associates, Inc
Doing interesting things with small computers since 1979
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| john.yan 2006-02-16, 3:03 am |
| Split tunnels allow traffic not going through the VPN tunnel to go through WAN interface unencrypted. If this is not selected, all traffic will be routed through the tunnel. In split tunnel mode, you must specify what network subnet goes through the tunnel.
I think you can read through their User Guide or Their support team. |
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