Hello,

1. Is it possible in some way to remove the routes to the subnet in
which the network adapter resides?
2. Is it possible to somehow forward traffic to a subnet trough a VPN
connection?

I am struggling with the problem of setting up a working VPN in an
environment where the local subnet is the same as the destination one.
I have googled up some solutions but cannot give them a try due to
problems in the above answers.

Any amount of manual work before / after enstabilishing a connection
will do fine, since I can script it anyway.

If VPN will do no good in such a situation, what other technologies
can I use to fix the problem if changing the subnet is not an option.

Thanks for any help in advance!

Re: Subnet routing & VPN by Robert

Robert
Tue May 13 07:53:52 PDT 2008

The only solution is create a peer to peer routing. This search result may
help.
Solution for peer to peer VPN using the same IP
Setup IPSec VPN - VPN using same ip in the different subnet. 3. You
may setup a different IP range or subnet for peer to peer VPN. For example,
in your case ...
www.chicagotech.net/casestudy/peervpn1.htm


--
Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE
Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on
http://www.ChicagoTech.net
How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on
http://www.HowToNetworking.com
"DustWolf" <jure.sah@bia.si> wrote in message
news:3e16ae74-1ecc-4262-b53c-59f23cd488d6@m45g2000hsb.googlegroups.com...
> Hello,
>
> 1. Is it possible in some way to remove the routes to the subnet in
> which the network adapter resides?
> 2. Is it possible to somehow forward traffic to a subnet trough a VPN
> connection?
>
> I am struggling with the problem of setting up a working VPN in an
> environment where the local subnet is the same as the destination one.
> I have googled up some solutions but cannot give them a try due to
> problems in the above answers.
>
> Any amount of manual work before / after enstabilishing a connection
> will do fine, since I can script it anyway.
>
> If VPN will do no good in such a situation, what other technologies
> can I use to fix the problem if changing the subnet is not an option.
>
> Thanks for any help in advance!


Re: Subnet routing & VPN by DustWolf

DustWolf
Wed May 14 06:18:59 PDT 2008

Hi,

I will try that.

My second questions is: What about connections that go the other way?

If A is using vpn to connect to network B, how does a computer from
network B connect to a service running on A? I have remote desktop in
mind.

Thanks for any help.

On 13 maj, 16:53, "Robert L. \(MS-MVP\)" <chicagot...@mvps.org> wrote:
> The only solution is create a peer to peer routing. This search result may
> help.
> Solution for peer to peer VPN using the same IP
> Setup IPSec VPN - VPN using same ip in the different subnet. 3. You
> may setup a different IP range or subnet for peer to peer VPN. For example,
> in your case ...
> www.chicagotech.net/casestudy/peervpn1.htm