Cannot rdp over vpn windows 7




















Aug 4, Question Randomly losing internet connection after reinstalling windows May 24, Mar 21, Connect to WiFi controlled device. Dec 10, Aug 3, Lose internet connection in browsers. Jul 8, Jun 26, Mar 1, Reset windows without losing connected Bluetooth devices. Feb 7, My laptop won't connect to my home network while other devices will. Jan 30, Laptop won't connect to internet after Windows 7 install. Jan 28, Windows 7. Jan 21, Toshiba Satellite C won't connect to internet.

Jan 17, Jan 15, Earlier it get connected but that too. Jan 4, Jan 3, Dec 19, Can't connect to phone hotspot. Dec 12, Windows 10 laptop not connecting to internet. Asked 6 years, 11 months ago. Active 5 years, 6 months ago. Viewed 3k times. Improve this question. Nate Nate 31 1 1 silver badge 4 4 bronze badges. As a start, try connecting from a computer in the same subnet to rule out routing and the MPLS connection as the problem.

The issue is that the VPN connection is a different subnet. There is no way for me to try within the same subnet while connected via VPN. If you are asking whether RDP works from within the same subnet, and not connected to VPN, then the answer is yes, but that is not the issue anyway and would prove nothing in the way of routing. Also, can't it be said that routing is not an issue because I can connect to XP just fine? My point was that by testing from a computer in the same subnet you could narrow your troubleshooting search.

If it works from the same subnet then the problem is not with the Windows 7 clients. If it doesn't work from the same subnet then yes that does prove something in the way of routing. It proves that the problem is likely the Windows 7 clients and not the VPN or routing. Oh, I understand narrowing the search, and appreciate the input for sure, but in this case it isn't possible as the VPN connection IS a different subnet.

That's what I was getting at. Show 2 more comments. Active Oldest Votes. You can't. Because your home LAN range overlaps the work range your home network will always win because it's in the routing table as the most specific route.

To expand on the above You need to change the network scheme on one side of the tunnel. It's easier to do it on your side I'm sure but this issue will likely occur for others unless the office network is changed so that should be considered.

To add to the above, you may be able to solve it short term by changing your home LAN, but you won't be so lucky when you're stuck in a hotel or other network where you have zero control. Best is to plan for an update of your corporate network to use subnets in the You might be able to "fix" this by adding a specific route to the Ip of the RDP server with a netmask of As others have said, when using VPN either from home to office or inter-office, you can't have the same network IP range on both sides.

If you think of it using a road analogy, your router is like a fork in the road, but when the IP ranges are the same, the signs on the road say your destination is on both branches of the fork and also the direction from which you arrived. This has all the signs of duplicate IPs or over lapping subnets. I would just change your home network to something like You may be able to overcome this problem temporarily by making sure that Split Tunneling is disabled.

This article is for enabling it, but will get you to the right place to check your configuration. I agree with everyone's feedback as well.



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