Fellas...
You must know that this thread is THE official, Unofficial support manual for getting VPN to work with the Linksys WRV54G Router.
A little background on my setup...
Internet >> Cable Modem >> WRV54G >> Win 2003 VPN Server
Router Firmware 2.25.2
Just want to give my clients and business partners the ability to access my network and data.
I had been plodding away for a few weeks just following the documentation put out by Linksys, trying to get the VPN portion of the router to work. Forget about their documentation, it will only get you non-stop 721 errors. I called Linksys, they said all you had to do was forward ports 47 & 1723 to your vpn server. DOH! Why didn't I think of that I say, knowing it wasn't going to work! Of course it didn't! It amazes me that Linksys puts out a product like this to begin with, but they don't even know how to support it, that is just plain funny...
But then I stumbled upon this thread.
2 posts did it for me...
The post by AndyG RE: Editting the router config file -
"Create a forwarding rule using either TCP/UDP or both. Name the rule GRE. Use port 47.
Go into Config management on the WRV54G and download the current config. Make a backup just in case something goes wrong. Edit this file and look for "GRE". Replace the protocol numbers (6) or (17) with 47. Save this file and Upload it back to the router. Now it should work. BTW, everytime you change any of the port fowarding options, you will have to re-do this fix as the protocol numbers default back to 6 or 17."
And in addition, I also had to follow the post by Maximvs RE: Port Triggering -
"This is how I manage to get PPTP working on my LAN. Its obvious you need PPTP passthrough enabled and have port 1723 forwarded to your VPN server, which is on the "Port Range Forwarding" page. Here is the the trick, you need to enable port triggering. In the "Port Triggering" page under "triggered range" the start and end port is 47. Under "forwarded range" the start and end port is 1723 and I set the protocol to both TCP and UDP. There is one more port to trigger. Under "triggered range" is 50 and "forwarded range" is 500. "
With these changes in hand, I was able to get clients to authenticate to the VPN server no problem...
Now if I could only figure out why they can't map to my shared network drives, that would be it...(wink,wink, HELP!)
BTW...Big props to gacollier for all his work on this one!
-Rob