I'll admit, I'm a complete noob regarding VPNs and just one tier above novice when it comes to networking, but I wanted to share my experience below and see if anyone had a comment.
I'll try to make this as brief as possible while still providing enough details.
I have two locations (home and office) and two asus routers (AC66U & AC68U). I have the AC68U at the office and have it set up as a VPN server. Up to this point, I have just logged into the office router via the computer I am on through the openvpn client software. This has worked fine, but there are reasons that make me want to try making the vpn connection at the router level, and connect both networks together.
So, last night I take my office laptop home with me to help set up the vpn client settings on the home router. I made the connection and was able to ping the office server from home and was pleased with how easy that went.
Then this morning, I come back to the office with my office laptop and something isn't right. I am unable to connect to the office network. I try all the usual troubleshooting techniques, but can't figure it out. Finally I think to check my ip address. After running ipconfig, I see that I have an ip address consistent with my home network (192.x.x.x) instead of my office network (10.x.x.x). I try to log into my office router to check my settings, but it says it can't find that address. So, I enter the ip address of my home router, and it connects right away. I check my network list and see my laptop listed on the list of connected devices. I disconnect the VPN, then go through the troubleshooting steps of reconnecting to my office domain and am successful.
For some reason the laptop held onto its connection to the home network through the VPN to the office. Is this the way it is supposed to be?
I'll try to make this as brief as possible while still providing enough details.
I have two locations (home and office) and two asus routers (AC66U & AC68U). I have the AC68U at the office and have it set up as a VPN server. Up to this point, I have just logged into the office router via the computer I am on through the openvpn client software. This has worked fine, but there are reasons that make me want to try making the vpn connection at the router level, and connect both networks together.
So, last night I take my office laptop home with me to help set up the vpn client settings on the home router. I made the connection and was able to ping the office server from home and was pleased with how easy that went.
Then this morning, I come back to the office with my office laptop and something isn't right. I am unable to connect to the office network. I try all the usual troubleshooting techniques, but can't figure it out. Finally I think to check my ip address. After running ipconfig, I see that I have an ip address consistent with my home network (192.x.x.x) instead of my office network (10.x.x.x). I try to log into my office router to check my settings, but it says it can't find that address. So, I enter the ip address of my home router, and it connects right away. I check my network list and see my laptop listed on the list of connected devices. I disconnect the VPN, then go through the troubleshooting steps of reconnecting to my office domain and am successful.
For some reason the laptop held onto its connection to the home network through the VPN to the office. Is this the way it is supposed to be?