Users will connect to their ISP and fire up the Cisco VPN client. They
will connect to the VPN-515 device and start a VPN session. They will
be assigned an IP on one of our internal networks. From then on, they
should have access as if they were located on campus.
Lets assume that the 6500 has an interface addressed 10.0.200.1/24.
The VPN-515 has an outside IP address of 10.0.200.254/24.
I am not sure how to configure the VPN-515 to make this happen. Should
I use a second interface on the VPN-515 to connect back into the 6500,
or should I do one-arm routing? Will I need a new IP network for
users?
Any help would be appreciated.
Tristan Rhodes
_______________________________________________
VPN mailing list
VPN (at) lists.shmoo (dot) com [email concealed]
http://lists.shmoo.com/mailman/listinfo/vpn
Here is what I think the connection will look like.
[VPN-user]----[Internet]----[Egress-Firewall]----[6500-Router]----[VPN-5
15]
Users will connect to their ISP and fire up the Cisco VPN client. They
will connect to the VPN-515 device and start a VPN session. They will
be assigned an IP on one of our internal networks. From then on, they
should have access as if they were located on campus.
Lets assume that the 6500 has an interface addressed 10.0.200.1/24.
The VPN-515 has an outside IP address of 10.0.200.254/24.
I am not sure how to configure the VPN-515 to make this happen. Should
I use a second interface on the VPN-515 to connect back into the 6500,
or should I do one-arm routing? Will I need a new IP network for
users?
Any help would be appreciated.
Tristan Rhodes
_______________________________________________
VPN mailing list
VPN (at) lists.shmoo (dot) com [email concealed]
http://lists.shmoo.com/mailman/listinfo/vpn
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