by absalomedia » Dec 19 03 5:11 pm
How else would you explain an adapter that cannot be seen in Wingate (let alone anywhere else - W2K Active Directory, DNS, RRAS, etc..) yet still holds control of all the DHCP data on an internal network via the registry ? It is a "ghost".
That was the bug, and there has been a significant commercial backlash against my business and my reputation because of it.
Let me ask you this - if you have two distinct networks both attached to the Net through the same router (same NETBIOS network name, different IP and DHCP scopes), both using W2K Active Directory integration into Wingate (i.e. the old network was being retired), is there a chance the DHCP scope / adapter info could be transferred between the network global catalogs?
When I initially set this network up, this "ghost" adapter wasn't happening. Online and offline access to the server/ Net via Wingate worked like a dream, yet as soon as the client decided to relocate the server to its designated area, all hell broke loose.
Now Wingate did something out of the ordinary because it was rendered Net access nearly inoperable for a month. Time and time again it came back to the issue that the DHCP data on the network was incorrect, yet all servers (Wingate, Wingate DHCP, Active Directory DNS, RRAS) all reported everything as legit and working.
The client finally found a registry setting showing Wingate pointing to the old network gateway instead of the new one, when I had expressly tested the network so it held the gateway data for the new network. And that fixed it..
As far as I can tell, there was a discrepancy between a "bound interface" in regards to what Wingate reported, and what Wingate had in registry.
(Hopefully screencaps of this bug in action will follow)