What man/handbook pages/sections should I look at to get a clue. I'm so far from having one, I don't even know the direction...
Thanks, -Jim Stapleton On 6/26/07, Artyom Viklenko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Jim Stapleton wrote: > That partially worked. I could only ping 192.168.1.1 on my local setup > (router). > > I used > $ mpd pptp0 > > However, I couldn't access the work DNS either. The latter output of > MPD looked like: > ========== > pptp0] IPCP: rec'd Configure Ack #4 link 0 (Ack-Sent) > IPADDR <IP-ADDR-A> > [pptp0] IPCP: state change Ack-Sent --> Opened > [pptp0] IPCP: LayerUp > <IP-ADDR-A> -> <IP-ADDR-B> > [pptp0] IFACE: Up event > [pptp0] setting interface ng0 MTU to 1396 bytes > [pptp0] exec: /sbin/ifconfig ng0 <IP-ADDR-A> <IP-ADDR-B> netmask > 0xffffffff -link0 > [pptp0] exec: /sbin/route add <IP-ADDR-A> -iface lo0 > [pptp0] exec: /sbin/route add 0.0.0.0 <IP-ADDR-B> > [pptp0] exec: command returned 256 > ========== > > > I could ping <IP-ADDR-A> and <IP-ADDR-B> after running mpd, but I > could not ping them before running it, or after shutting it down. Both > are valid IP addresses on my works internal network. > > Aside from my nve0 and l0 devices, which look normal, ifconfig > displays the following: > > ========== > ng0: flags=88d1<UP,POINTOPOINT,RUNNING,NOARP,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST> mtu 1396 > inet <IP-ADDR-A> --> <IP-ADDR-B> netmask 0xffffffff > ========== > > I could not ping the DNS servers. > > Any suggestions? I think you need static route to your VPN server. After setting up tullel your default route changes. This can lead to incorrect routing. -- Sincerely yours, Artyom Viklenko. ------------------------------------------------------- [EMAIL PROTECTED] | http://www.aws-net.org.ua/~artem FreeBSD: The Power to Serve - http://www.freebsd.org
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