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maxpaynewoow2015-01-24 19:08:38
Mikrotik
maxpaynewoow, 2015-01-24 19:08:38

Access to the server through 2 router?

ab1c71c9bf4741ac931cd32ea4321476.png
The bottom line is that users from subnet 0 have access to Windows Server. At the moment there is access to 1 subnet.
Windows Server has a real ip address and connects via vpn to R1.

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4 answer(s)
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oia, 2015-01-24
@oia

to solve the issue in the picture, it was necessary to add arrows to what goes where, and so configure the routing on the routers
https://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/ru-RU/...

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Cool Admin, 2015-01-24
@ifaustrue

On both routers, the route to the server (or its network) and to the clients (or their network) must be, and there should not be firewall rules prohibiting such traffic. Everything else will work.

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RStarun, 2015-01-24
@RStarun

It's hard to tell from the picture.
You need to configure routing on routers - it's their job to route packets.
You can start by trying to push one single packet from the PC to the nearest router, then to the next one, and so on to the server.
ping 192.168.0.1 - this clearly works
ping 192.168.1.1 - this is also apparently
ping 192.168.31.1 - this is not.
On each of the routers, we prescribe where to send the packet for subnets such and such.
when trying to access from subnet 192.168.1.0/24 to 192.168.31.1 is there an answer? Is the route registered to 192.168.31.1 on R1?
The server itself may also not route packets.

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maxpaynewoow, 2015-01-24
@maxpaynewoow

Earned, even I blunted))) ATP all forgot to specify the route on Windows.

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