> I'm wondering if anybody has come up with a reasonable > solution to static routes for Windows 95/98/NT laptop users > in networks with a firewall and *another* gateway. > If we have a setup where: > - The default route points to the firewall on the local > network, and; > - You need an additional route to point to a gateway for > some private network (either via VPN or a private (leased line > or frame relay) link). > (e.g.: the route to 0.0.0.0 is 10.0.0.1 and the route to > 172.16.0.0/16 is 10.0.0.2) > > Specific problems I have run into include: > > - With a PIX firewall, even you don't mind having packets Why not use a Microsoft Proxy, what is designed especially for Windows Clients with a Microsoft Proxy Client, where no need to configure client hosts, only the server? You can also enable 'packet filtering' on MSProxy, when you enable the 'Enable IP routing' on the NT server acts as a firewall. You can assign access rights by user-level. > bounce off the PIX inside interface, it won't let you. If you > have a "route inside" statement, you get an error of the form: > 106011: Deny inbound (No xlate) tcp > src inside:X.X.X.X/1047 dst inside:Y.Y.Y.Y/23 > Which is the PIX's way of saying it refuses to receive a > packet on the inside interface and resend it to a gateway > on the inside. So you need a route on each host inside. > > - If you have a "route add" in a startup .BAT file on a 95 or > 98 PC or a "route add -p" on an NT PC, if it is a laptop and that > laptop travels to the remote network the "route add" is pointing > at, then you need a .BAT file to reverse the startup .BAT file. > I assume you might have similar problems with a *nix laptop. > Is there a way to get one of these systems to listen to > RIP or something similar ? > I think I can do this with DHCP, but at least one of the > networks involved is very small and it would be nice to avoid > having to to setup a DHCP server (and having one more server > piece to depend on). I think its not really difficult to setup a DHCP server, and no need to have one more (blah) server on your network, and that service won't zonk your PDC, for example. So I don't suggest to make an extra-tricky startup batch (if you prefer that way, anyway, use the VB-scipting instead). Csiri
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Fri Apr 13 2001 - 13:56:37 PDT