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From: Daryl M. <dar...@te...> - 2016-11-25 06:20:29
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Hi Selva, Thank you for the reply. If you aren’t using redirect gateway, I guess it’s a different situation. WRT ICS, I’ll use anything that works. As I said, I couldn’t even get the client and server to connect using RRAS. WRT NAT, server was NATting the 10.x.x.x VPN address to the LAN address and router was NATting to the WAN address. It was working exactly as you would expect, just not for ipv6. Thanks. From: Selva Nair [mailto:sel...@gm...] Sent: Friday, November 18, 2016 10:47 AM To: Daryl Morse <dar...@te...> Cc: openvpn users list (ope...@li...) <ope...@li...> Subject: Re: [Openvpn-users] Problems setting up dual-stack OpenVPN server on a Windows 10 host Hi, On Thu, Nov 17, 2016 at 11:34 PM, Daryl Morse <dar...@te... <mailto:dar...@te...> > wrote: Further to the previous email linked below. I upgraded to the 2.4_beta1 software in case it might have made a difference. It did not. I’m wondering if any other users or developers encounter the same problem as I described. We have an openvpn server running on Windows (Server 2008R2), but we don't let clients do redirect-gateway, so its a simple setup. A server config similar to what you posted and no ICS or NAT. On Fri, Nov 18, 2016 at 6:16 AM, Jan Just Keijser <ja...@ni... <mailto:ja...@ni...> > wrote: I'd not use ICS , however, as ICS turns your (tap) adapter into a statically configured device , and sets up a DHCP server on this device. It *is* possible to run OpenVPN in such a configuration but it is very non-standard. I too would suggest not to use ICS -- it could be probably made to work with some registry hacks, but its going to be pain. Try if you could do the NAT for the private ipv4 vpn addresses on the pfsense router of the server-side network. Selva |