Re: 192.168 - why?
AZ Nomad <aznomad.3@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
If I ssh to work, it is via a vpn and my work's DNS server will give
me addresses that don't correspond to anything on the internet.
That's the Right Way to do it. And, as a matter of fact, one of those
machines in my office is running a vpn server, which is how I get from
school to my home network.
.
Relevant Pages
- Re: Name resolution for VPN Clients
... using an IP that is part of the VPN client's normal "local" network ... A local network is a network-cheaper name lookup than any VPN connection. ... define the "local" DNS server to be one provided by your ISP ... permanent LAN Client or a VPN User. ... (microsoft.public.isa.vpn) - Re: Name resolution for VPN Clients
... controlled by the ISA when connected by VPN etc. ... intents and purposes the internal DNS server does indeed to be resolving the ... The Internet Device should never be involved in any ... Understanding the ISA 2004 Access Rule Processing ... (microsoft.public.isa.vpn) - Re: IPSec VPN into XP Pro
... This page has more information concerning the XP VPN... ... As far as SSH is concerned, I just think its a whole lot easier for home users like myself to setup ... a few consumer grade routers and the problems encountered getting a PPTP tunnel through them... ... > tunnel and set up secure redirections via command line. ... (microsoft.public.windowsxp.work_remotely) - Re: Strange DNS
... >> You are trying to lookup a resource located in your office. ... the ISP DNS server is not able to locate the record. ... >> inside your office are now tunnelled through the VPN connection. ... (microsoft.public.win2000.dns) - Re: VPN Clients DNS Issue
... The problem is the way that Windows XP has the network adapters bound. ... this the DNS will resolve correctly when you are connected to a VPN. ... the client it shows that the default DNS server is the DNS server that is ... but the VPN client was still resolving to the external IP. ... (microsoft.public.windows.server.dns) |
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