Vpn For Mac Leopard
To create a new vpn tunnel in your MAC OS device you need to do the next: 1. Click the Apple logo, and select System Preferences 2. Click on the Network icon under Internet & Network 3. If you see a locked padlock in the bottom left, clic. Setting up PublicVPN access under Mac OS X 10.5 is simple. The following instructions go step–by–step through the creation process.
Welcome back to another how to. This one deals with setting up a VPN connection to your office on the latest Apple operating system, Leopard (10.5) To Start 1) Click the apple logo, and select System Preferences 2) Click on the Network icon under Internet & Network 3) If you see a locked padlock in the bottom left, click on it. Otherwise skip to step 5. 4) Enter your password in the dialog box 5) Click on the little + icon just above the padlock 6) Select “VPN” From the interface drop down. 7) Select “PPTP” From the VPN Type drop down 8) Enter the name of the company you are connecting to, and click “Create” 9) Enter the Server Address that your system administrator has provided to you, and your username.
Also check the box that says “Show VPN status in menu bar” 10) Click on the “Authentication Settings” button, and enter your password 11) Almost done. Click the “Apply” button to save the changes.
12) In the top right of your screen, click the token icon that looks like this. From that, a menu will drop down.
Click on the “Connect” link for your company name. This will initiate the VPN connection. 13) If all is well, after a few seconds you will be connected, and a timer will start showing you how long you’ve been connected DONE.
Hi there, A month ago I made the switch from a G4 (Panther) to a brand new iMac Intel 2,4 GHz (Leopard 10.5.1). I work at home and I use the build-in VPN functionality of Panther to get a secure connection to the server. Normally I make connection to the main business server (non-Mac) via PPTP (IPv4 through PPP, password authentication, encryption setting on ‘Automatic’) and from there I forward myself to the Panther XServe. In my hardware router I’ve opened port 1723 on the IP of the G4. I’ve worked problemfree for a long time with this setup.
But I want to make that also working with the iMac. So I've exported the VPN-config from Panther and I've imported that to a new generated VPN-account in Leopard. I don't have a lot of experience with netwerk configurations, so I guess that is a safe way to make VPN happen in Leopard. In my hardware router I've closed port 1723 on the IP of Panther and I opened that port on the IP of the iMac. With this configuration I cannot make contact with the server.
When I set ‘Encryption’ to ‘None’ I can logon to the main server, but I can’t forward myself to the XServe. In ‘Systempreferences’ > ‘Network’ I've slided the VPN account on top of the list of netwerk services. Now I can make contact to the main server and I can forward myself to the XServe. But only if I keep the encryption set to ‘None’. In my opinion it’s not safe to use VPN without encryption. I cannot understand why I can’t use VPN on the iMac with data encryption. I feel I’m that close to probleemfree and safe networking, but I don’t know where to look to solve the problem.
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The configuration on the main business server hasn't been changed (If I want I still can succesfully and secure logon to the servers with Panther). Maybe I’ll find an answer here. Greetz, Funky.
Message was edited by: funkybee. Here is the solution, courtesy of a tech support page for Boston College ( ): VPN *Leopard Compatibility: VPN works with Leopard, but with known issues* *Issues: The Leopard VPN doesn't send traffic over the VPN by default. To remedy this, go to System Preferences -> Network and click your VPN connection. Click the 'Advanced' button, and in the 'Options' tab, make sure that 'Send all traffic over VPN connection' is checked.
Note: Without this option checked, JSTOR, WorldCat, and other institutional subscription sites don't work correctly from off campus.* I checked this option, and my connection now works just fine. I don't have the answer to your problem, but I did have Win VPN problems at one point. I have a similar setup to yours: Netgear Firewall/Router gateway VPN from a Mac Book Pro to a Windows network. Connection settings exactly as you described in your post As far as I know, you shouldn't need to open up any ports. If the router supports VPN passthrough, then you should be fine. I was not able to connect initially even though the Linksys router I had claimed to support VPN passthrough.
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