With ISA2000,...Add the Remote LAN's address range to the LAT. If the
remote LAN also uses an *internal* AD FQDN then you must add that to the LDT
of ISA.
It is generally a less than ideal thing to try to use the ISA as a LAN
Router, which is what you are doing. ISA2004 is designed differently and
can do that better, although I still don't think it is a great idea to
combine the product you use for a Firewall to protect you LAN on the same
device that also routes between the LAN segments. In my opinion the two
should "live" in two different places.
--
Phillip Windell [MCP, MVP, CCNA]
www.wandtv.com
"Anas" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:7D49E6F2-C0A3-403E-A21F-(E-Mail Removed)...
> I have connected a Safenet VPN client installed on ISA 2000 and windows
2003
> server to VPN server in remote location through an ISDN dialup connection.
> Can I connect my Local LAN through the VPN client installed on my ISA
server
> to the remote VPN server?
> Considering that I have only one Ethernet Card on my ISA server and ISDN
> Dialup Connection.
>
> Is it