RE: SSL Problems with ISA 2004

  • From: "Ball, Dan" <DBall@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "[ISAserver.org Discussion List]" <isalist@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 25 Jan 2005 17:20:50 -0500

That might make sense, but when I added IP ranges to the Network
settings in ISA, they didn't show up in RRAS or the ROUTE PRINT, even
after reboot.

-----Original Message-----
From: Steve Moffat [mailto:steve@xxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 25, 2005 15:01
To: [ISAserver.org Discussion List]
Subject: [isalist] RE: SSL Problems with ISA 2004

http://www.ISAserver.org

ISA controls RRAS, any mods you make in the RRAS mmc are overwritten by
ISA.

Steve 

-----Original Message-----
From: Ball, Dan [mailto:DBall@xxxxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 25, 2005 3:15 PM
To: ISA Mailing List
Subject: [isalist] RE: SSL Problems with ISA 2004

http://www.ISAserver.org

Precisely!  This is what I had determined last year, but was only able
to actually test it over the last month.  

I do have a couple of questions about this though (I can hear you
groaning already).  

The IP Ranges configured for each "Network" don't seem to have an effect
on actual routing, I was kinda expecting them to make the appropriate
modifications to the W2K3 routing tables, but it doesn't seem to work
that way.  What "actual" effect does entering IP ranges in Network
Properties have?

So, to work around this, I entered in static routes using the Routing
and Remote Access MMC, but those didn't seem to have much of an effect
either. When I entered these routes in using the ROUTE ADD command from
the command prompt, they took effect immediately.  I haven't researched
this yet, but was under the assumption that both the MMC and the command
prompt method modified the same routing table. Is this not the case?

-----Original Message-----
From: Thomas W Shinder [mailto:tshinder@xxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Tuesday, January 25, 2005 11:18
To: [ISAserver.org Discussion List]
Subject: [isalist] RE: SSL Problems with ISA 2004

http://www.ISAserver.org

Hi David,

As I predicted very early on, the term "multi-networking" has created
unneeded confusion :)

Multinetworking is a marketing terms and its very simple.

ISA Server 2000 was LAT based and supported only two networks -- LAT and
non-LAT

ISA Server 2004 supports an unlimited of Networks (capital N) because
there is NO LAT.

HTH, 


Tom
www.isaserver.org/shinder
Tom and Deb Shinder's Configuring ISA Server 2004
http://tinyurl.com/3xqb7
MVP -- ISA Firewalls



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