Zhang Weiwu wrote:
On Fri, 2007-03-23 at 10:22 +0800, Zhang Weiwu wrote:
I am thinking perhaps it's not difficult to set up some software on the server that do the "routing", e.g. it serve as a call center that both office login to a VOIP software and it connects to the server, the server talk to both sides. This is the fastest solution and it should work. That's only my imagination, I am still searching for such software.
Certainly THIS would work: set up VPN on the server and both office dial into the VPN before they start to use some SIP software. This can solve the problem, but I think it's over complicated.
Besides, I never tried VPN on Linux, only did it on Windows: on windows the downside is once a host has dialed up VPN, local network connection is "hidden" for it, that I can no longer access the hosts in the same office that has not yet dialed in the same VPN. This is not acceptable for us.
You used Windows PPTP VPN, which forces the default route through the tunnel. I use OpenVPN, on both Linux and Windows. It works well and does not force the default route. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org