Configuring Tunneling Modes Using The Cli - Nortel 7 Configuration

Vpn router — basic features
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3
Select None from the Split Tunnel Networks menu.
4
Select a network from the Inverse Split Tunnel Networks menu.
5
Go to the bottom of the page and click OK.

Configuring tunneling modes using the CLI

The tunneling mode is selected in the CLI using the following commands after
entering group ipsec configuration mode.
split tunneling <enable|inverse|inverse-local>
If you are using a split tunnel, the split tunnel networks are defined using the
following command:
split tunnel-network <defined network name>
For inverse-split and inverse-local options, the inverse-split tunnel networks are
defined using this command:
split inverse-tunnel-network <defined network name>
Example (split tunnel)
group ipsec "/Base/Mike/Split Tunneling"
split tunneling enable
split tunnel-network "17 Net"
Example (inverse-split tunnel)
group ipsec "/Base/Mike/Inverse Split Tunneling"
split tunneling inverse
split inverse-tunnel-network "16 Net"
Persistent tunneling provides a continuous connection. After successfully
establishing a tunnel session to the Nortel VPN Router, the Nortel VPN Client
makes every attempt to maintain a viable VPN connection without additional user
intervention.
For further configuration information on IPSec mobility and persistence, see
Nortel VPN Router Configuration — Basic Features .
Chapter 4 Configuring user tunnels 89
Nortel VPN Router Configuration — Basic Features

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