Re: Windows Server 2003 R2 x64 RRAS seems to be limiting connectio

Tech-Archive recommends: Repair Windows Errors & Optimize Windows Performance



Just to be clear, the servers on the 192.168.11.0 network are using 192.168.11.1 as their default gateway?

Kurt


Mark Wilson wrote:
Thanks for getting back to me on this Addy.

Just to clarify, the 192.168.17.0 network (LAN1) is a mixture of wired (100Mbps) and wireless (54Mbps) - the access point (192.168.17.254) is a separate device to the ADSL router (192.168.17.1) and clients on that network can use wired or wireless connections to contact the DHCP server and get a 192.168.17.x address.

The route on the ADSL modem (router) is to ensure that the default gateway knows where to send packets for LAN2 (it's the way that I was advised to set this up when I had ISA between the two networks, instead of RRAS)

There is no WiFi on LAN2 but wired connections on the 192.168.11.0 subnet work with no issue. It's only when I'm connected to the 192.168.17.0 subnet that I have a problem (wired or wireless); hence the reason I suspect my RRAS config.

Finally, I'm not getting any sensible error messages (hence my frustration!), just lots of timeouts, files that never open etc. I had wondered if this was a firewall issue but I can browse to the shares OK...

Very odd!

Mark

"addy" wrote:

Hi Mark

I couldn't quite catch the WiFi Bit. What is the range of IP addresses
assgned to the WiFi Clients? What's with the route on the ADSL modem
is that your AP(Access point) ? if yes the it would mean the clients
on WiFi would be in 192.168.17.0/24 subnet. You have a gateway at
192.168.17.2 set to your DSL router. You can access shares when you
are on WiFi in the 192.168.12.0/24 subnet the how could this be RRAS
issue. The file access is over SMB, IP cannot differentiate between
access to a file or browsing the share. Unless your NAS somehow
detects you don't have permissions on this particular share and throws
an access denied. Which leads me to another question what is the error
message which pops up when you access the files.


Could you clarify a bit more on this one.

Thanks
Aditya

.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: How to set my MAC address
    ... because the VLAN isolation fails between the wifi side and the wired ... ports that I started experimenting with the 2nd subnet feature. ... there is no option to isolate the wireless from the VLAN. ... give out the password of my own wifi network, ...
    (uk.comp.sys.mac)
  • Re: public/private IPs and subnet masks
    ... and gateway 132.132.132.254 ... You want to setup your new network printer with a private IP. ... I wonder if it matters which subnet gateway the printer should get ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.network_web)
  • Re: Windows Server 2003 R2 x64 RRAS seems to be limiting connectio
    ... you have disabled DHCP server on the AP and done an "ipconfig /all" to verify that the correct default gateway is being assigned to wireless clients? ... There is no WiFi on LAN2 but wired connections on the 192.168.11.0 subnet work with no issue. ... It's only when I'm connected to the 192.168.17.0 subnet that I have a problem; hence the reason I suspect my RRAS config. ...
    (microsoft.public.win2000.ras_routing)
  • Re: can an alias address be routed through?
    ... The other interface sis0 has an address of 192.169.1.254 with a subnet ... BUT from the 192.169 network It still doesnt ... If i add a route ... In other words, no matter what your netmask, your gateway ...
    (comp.unix.bsd.openbsd.misc)
  • Re: public/private IPs and subnet masks
    ... and gateway 132.132.132.254 ... You want to setup your new network printer with a private IP. ... I wonder if it matters which subnet gateway the printer should get ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.network_web)