"... this interface is no longer available on your syst

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"... this interface is no longer available on your syst

Postby sten » Jan 15 04 11:19 pm

our Wingate installation handles two ethernet cards for the intranet (192.168.0.1 and 192.168.0.1) and one for the internet. when one of us turns off the computer (192.168.0.2 or 192.168.0.4) and then restarts it, Wingate doesn't recognize the renewed availability of the LAN-connection. only shutting down WingateEngine and restarting it, resolves the problem. How can we avoid this?
sten
 
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Postby neil » Jan 16 04 9:57 am

So you have two different internal NICs both with the same IP (192.168.0.1)? I wouldn't recommend this approach really. Is there any particular reason why say the second internal NIC couldn't be 192.168.1.1?

What version of Windows are you using?! Are you saying that the because the clients machines are off Windows (Media Sense) has disabled the interface; so that when WinGate starts Windows has hidden it, and thus we don't bind to it?! If this is the case, then we obviously can't bind to something that we can't see. The best way to get around this is to either, set each WinGate service to 'Bind to any interface' under the Bindings tab of each services properties. This does have the down side of being a slight security issue as this will allow external connections in. However, as long as you dont put a hole in the Firewall (assuming your using the WinGate ENS) for these services you should still be protected.

You can also disable Media Sense which should alleviate the need for performing the above. This is the link for how to do it for Win 2000.

http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;239924&Product=win2000

Regards

Neil
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typo - seems to resolve the problem

Postby sten » Jan 16 04 11:02 pm

hello!

thank you for your answer. the internal NICs of the server are off course bound to two different IPs (192.168.0.1 and 192.168.0.3). sorry for the typo! we are using Win XP Pro SP1 on the server-machine and the two clients are using it either, but I think that your suggestion regarding Win2000 identifies the problem on the Win XP server machine too.
sten
 
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