I have an ADVPN setup with 2 hubs and several spokes.The spokes have 2
WAN connections, the Hubs each have 1. With standard site-to-site VPN,
you can have 2 tunnels active to the same location as long as 1
interface on either side is different. IE: b...
We are adding secondary internet connections to a number of our sites,
and will need IPSec tunnels to utilize both connections in a mostly
active-passive scenario.It looks like the best way to do this is with
SDWAN, but to add existing IPSEC interfac...
We are currently converting the topology of our network infrastructure
from a semi-mesh IPSEC monstrosity to a ADVPN with BGP
topology.Currently, we use phase 2 settings to help isolate which
networks can access other networks along with firewall rul...
I am working on designing a solution that requires a 'spoke' network to
communicate with other 'spoke' networks without the other spoke networks
being able to communicate with each other.There is a remote operations
center, 2 datacenters (these will ...
You don't have to disconnect to switch between networks. Just 1 network
has SSLVPN and you access the 2nd network through IPSEC and SSLVPN
Portal settings. (and firewall rules).
Yes.If you already have SSLVPN setup to one of the locations, all you
need to do is configure the IPSEC tunnel between the locations and
configure an SSLVPN portal on the site with the existing SSLVPN
connection. The portal will grant access to the r...
You provided an incorrect answer.With SSLVPN portals, you can use an
SSLVPN connection from a central location to access resources on the
other end of as many IPSEC tunnels as you want.
Do IP Sec from your premise network to the cloud.SSL VPN to premise
network and configure SSLVPN portal to allow SSLVPN clients to access
cloud resources.