can you list the result of
sh ip route
on the PIX.
Thanks.
nedbert9
A+, CCNA, CNE 3-5, MCSE NT4, MCP 2003
A leisurely lifestyle is a sign of wisdom and maturity - Aristotle
I have no experience with Clustering, but as a standard practice you should implement some error checking/catching, even just to check the error level and description via wscript.echo err.number & err.description, at important parts of your script and some wscript.echo 's to check your time...
ARRGGGG!
Today I am doubly wrong!
PPTP, Point to Point Tunneling Protocol, is based on GRE.
Different, but based on it.
Don't listen to me today!
Here's a VPN, PPTP and GRE info for you. Hopefully, this will redeem myself...
I'd like to get some information on that too.
Thanks for the question.
nedbert9
A+, CCNA, CNE 3-5, MCSE NT4, MCP 2003
A leisurely lifestyle is a sign of wisdom and maturity - Aristotle
Could be a problem with the additional IP adapter, (I believe it's the deterministic network adapter) the client adds and reinstallation.
I've seen this error on laptops when the network card gets unseated and reseated. Have to reboot the laptop to get the VPN client to work again...
Correction.
As LGARNER says it's an encapsulation protocol for IP routing other protocols.
It can be used to encapsulate traffic like IPsec.
nedbert9
A+, CCNA, CNE 3-5, MCSE NT4, MCP 2003
A leisurely lifestyle is a sign of wisdom and maturity - Aristotle
GRE is the underlying protocol for IPSec.
nedbert9
A+, CCNA, CNE 3-5, MCSE NT4, MCP 2003
A leisurely lifestyle is a sign of wisdom and maturity - Aristotle
This should help you solidify the idea.
http://searchnetworking.techtarget.com/searchNetworking/Downloads/DSLch6.pdf
Pages 182-183 in the manual.
nedbert9
A+, CCNA, CNE 3-5, MCSE NT4, MCP 2003
A leisurely lifestyle is a sign of wisdom and maturity - Aristotle
RMSTAR, thank you for making us aware of this bridging method.
nedbert9
A+, CCNA, CNE 3-5, MCSE NT4, MCP 2003
A leisurely lifestyle is a sign of wisdom and maturity - Aristotle
I understand. Does the clustering software you will be using require that the servers be on the same subnet? That seems a bit odd to me. Most I know of either have heartbeat links or are fully IP enabled.
After spending some time thinking about it this would work fine if you just needed...
Also, in order to get specific configs you need to provide information on the type of WAN connections you will be using.
nedbert9
A+, CCNA, CNE 3-5, MCSE NT4, MCP 2003
A leisurely lifestyle is a sign of wisdom and maturity - Aristotle
This is a very interesting question. Thanks!
I'm only a CCNA, but I can see there would be an ARP broadcast issue, as well as any other broadcast based protocol like NetBios, DHCP etc.
I hope someone comes along to better define and explain the pro's and con's.
Before any subnet to subnet...
Thanks for the double post Peter. I love config spam.
nedbert9
A+, CCNA, CNE 3-5, MCSE NT4, MCP 2003
A leisurely lifestyle is a sign of wisdom and maturity - Aristotle
Is there a guide or anyone able to comment on the performance of the different series of routers? Let's say in the amount of traffic and/or number of users each series can truely support without noticable packet loss or slowdown? I'm somewhat discouraged when I hear things like, "You can...
Good job folks.
Now, I have a question about setting default routes to Interfaces instead of IP's.
In some simple destination load balancing examples I've seen folks recommend using:
ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 Ethernet0 [metric]
ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 Ethernet1 [metric]
However, as you say...
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