Hello, Policies. Our university has implemented a policy that requires us to know which user was using which IP. I can (through logging) make this mapping but it would be easier to have a statically assigned address for some purposes. Bill -----Original Message----- From: Thomas W Shinder [mailto:tshinder@xxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2004 1:19 PM To: [ISAserver.org Discussion List] Subject: [isalist] RE: VPN Server Client address space. http://www.ISAserver.org Hi William, What's the purpose of assigning a static address? You can perform strong user/group based access controls over VPN clients using the ISA firewall's VPN server. HTH, Tom www.isaserver.org/shinder Get the book! Tom and Deb Shinder's Configuring ISA Server 2004 http://tinyurl.com/3xqb7 MVP -- ISA Firewalls -----Original Message----- From: William Holmes [mailto:wtholmes@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2004 12:16 PM To: [ISAserver.org Discussion List] Subject: [isalist] VPN Server Client address space. http://www.ISAserver.org Hello, I am currently using a Windows 2000 RRAS server for my PPTP VPNs. I am planning on replacing this with an ISA 2004 Sever. Currently we assign "Real" IP addresses to the clients rather than private addresses. Both the internal and external interfaces of the current server live on "Real Routable" interfaces. My question is can I configure the VPN networks on ISA to use a private address space (192.168.x.x) while retaining the current network configs for the internal and external interfaces? It appears that I can but I just wanted to be sure. Part2: We use RADIUS for our vpn authentication. When using Radius is it possible to assign a specific address to a user when they authenticate? I would like a given user to always receive the same IP address when they connect. I know that the information can be assigned from my RADIUS server, I am just not sure if RRAS will honor the assignment. Thanks Bill William Holmes (MCP) Department of Computer Science 310 Upson Hall Cornell University Ithaca, NY 14853 wtholmes@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx 607 255-1757 (o) 607 227-6049 (c) ------------------------------------------------------ List Archives: http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist ISA Server Newsletter: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/newsletter.asp ISA Server FAQ: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/larticle.asp?type=FAQ ------------------------------------------------------ Other Internet Software Marketing Sites: World of Windows Networking: http://www.windowsnetworking.com Leading Network Software Directory: http://www.serverfiles.com No.1 Exchange Server Resource Site: http://www.msexchange.org Windows Security Resource Site: http://www.windowsecurity.com/ Network Security Library: http://www.secinf.net/ Windows 2000/NT Fax Solutions: http://www.ntfaxfaq.com ------------------------------------------------------ You are currently subscribed to this ISAserver.org Discussion List as: tshinder@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe visit http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist Report abuse to listadmin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx ------------------------------------------------------ List Archives: http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist ISA Server Newsletter: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/newsletter.asp ISA Server FAQ: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/larticle.asp?type=FAQ ------------------------------------------------------ Other Internet Software Marketing Sites: World of Windows Networking: http://www.windowsnetworking.com Leading Network Software Directory: http://www.serverfiles.com No.1 Exchange Server Resource Site: http://www.msexchange.org Windows Security Resource Site: http://www.windowsecurity.com/ Network Security Library: http://www.secinf.net/ Windows 2000/NT Fax Solutions: http://www.ntfaxfaq.com ------------------------------------------------------ You are currently subscribed to this ISAserver.org Discussion List as: wtholmes@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe visit http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist Report abuse to listadmin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx