From: rick0.merrill@NOSPAM.gmail.com   
      
   GrantH wrote:   
   > On May 10, 12:02 pm, Rick Merrill    
   > wrote:   
   >> GrantH wrote:   
   >>> I have a LinksysVPNrouter which allows multipleVPNend-to-end   
   >>> tunnels, which works fine. However, to use a softwareVPNclient   
   >>> (CheckPoint, Cisco, etc.), the router's IPSec pass-through must be   
   >>> enabled, which breaks the tunnel(s), and vice-versa.   
   >>> Linksys has already explained that this is a limitation. I'm looking   
   >>> for a device (broadband router,VPNconcentrator, whatever) which will   
   >>> allow this implementaion, or an alternative setup with perhaps 2   
   >>> routers, a router and concentrator, etc.   
   >>> Our new office has 5 static IPs, I'm hoping I can come up with some   
   >>> solution where any host w/in the LAN could use a connectedVPNtunnel,   
   >>> while another host used a softwareVPNclient to make a different   
   >>> connection.   
   >>> Any help on this?   
   >>> Thanks in advance!   
   >>> Grant   
   >> Why?   
   >>   
   >> Don't you have a s/w client for the linksys?- Hide quoted text -   
   >>   
   >> - Show quoted text -   
   >   
   > No - The sw client is used to make a non-tunnel VPN connection, from a   
   > LAN workstation, to one of our clients somewhere outside, who are   
   > configured to connect via a regular VPN client. The tunnels are used   
   > for other clients who want the added security of an endpoint-to-   
   > endpoint dedicated tunne. With our current router, no VPN client will   
   > work unless the router's pass-through is turned on - but when turned   
   > on, the router ONLY passes the IPSec traffic, and will no longer use   
   > it for any dedicated tunnels.   
   >   
      
   You will have to find a simpler way to accomplish the end goal.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
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