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#170896 - 16/07/2003 10:09 Quick NT Routing question
jmwking
old hand

Registered: 27/02/2003
Posts: 770
Loc: Washington, DC metro
My ISP accidently killed the T-1 in one of my satellite offices. I need to get some quick and dirty IP routing going between corporate office and satellite office.

I have a Windows NT machine (primarily used for PC Anywhere) available the satellite office, and pretty much whatever I need here in my corporate office. We run Netware servers, but I don't have any NIAS installed, and I don't relish installing that remotely.

Do any of you know how I can set up a dial up connection between the two offices, and route IP between the two subnets, or can you point me to a cookbook reference? I do a little cisco and firewall stuff, and know my way around basic IP routing, but have never set up an NT box to do RAS.

thanks,

-jk

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#170897 - 16/07/2003 10:17 Re: Quick NT Routing question [Re: jmwking]
tfabris
carpal tunnel

Registered: 20/12/1999
Posts: 31578
Loc: Seattle, WA
The services you need to install on NT are called "Routing and Remote Access" or RRAS, and I'm not sure if they're on the NT installation CD or if they're on the NT resource kit CD.
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#170898 - 16/07/2003 10:25 Re: Quick NT Routing question [Re: jmwking]
crazymelki
enthusiast

Registered: 16/02/2001
Posts: 373
Loc: Switzerland
Hi,

The codename for RRAS with WinNT was "Steelhead".

I found that for you:http://www.windowsitlibrary.com/Content/155/10/1.html
bye
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#170899 - 16/07/2003 10:43 Re: Quick NT Routing question [Re: crazymelki]
jmwking
old hand

Registered: 27/02/2003
Posts: 770
Loc: Washington, DC metro
Thanks for the link.

Uh, oh. Does it work on NT Workstation, or NT Server only? I got an error message when I tried to install it - the machine is NT workstation (my bad - I failed to mention that in my original post).

I want to pull my hair out!

-jk

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#170900 - 16/07/2003 10:48 Re: Quick NT Routing question [Re: jmwking]
tman
carpal tunnel

Registered: 24/12/2001
Posts: 5528
It's probably a Server only option. Microsoft limited the kernel in Workstation so you wouldn't be able to use it for any server type duties. There are some registry settings you can change to remove these limitations but I can't quite remember what they were.

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#170901 - 16/07/2003 10:52 Re: Quick NT Routing question [Re: jmwking]
crazymelki
enthusiast

Registered: 16/02/2001
Posts: 373
Loc: Switzerland
You need also SP5 or higher....

bye
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#170902 - 16/07/2003 10:57 Re: Quick NT Routing question [Re: crazymelki]
jmwking
old hand

Registered: 27/02/2003
Posts: 770
Loc: Washington, DC metro
You need also SP5 or higher....
That part I have. Sigh.

I'll keep plugging away at it on google. Maybe I can come up with something.

thanks,

-jk

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#170903 - 16/07/2003 12:09 Re: Quick NT Routing question [Re: jmwking]
Ezekiel
pooh-bah

Registered: 25/08/2000
Posts: 2413
Loc: NH USA
You need a modem router like the 3Com OfficeConnect 3C888US. They're about $300, and there may be some that are cheaper. If you have a dial-up server (or can configure one) at the home office you can have the remote office dial right in. I don't think there's a way to make an NT workstation box act as a router to a dial-up. If you give your new modem router the same IP address as your T1 firewall/gateway then you don't have to reconfigure any of the client machines. I don't have this model (rather an old WebRamp), but they are very simple to set up, a consideration if you don't have skilled personnell at the remote site.

If the NT boxen were getting security authorization from the home office over the T1 then I might think about configuring the Domain server for slow links.

-Zeke

That, or install Linux on your NT Workstation box!
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