Hello,
I'm a WAN ENgineer for my company and we have been having recent noticeable issues with our VPN users getting disconnected randomly from VPN or they're able to authenticate but NOT access any server-side resource (ICMP,telnet, RDP, etc.) In an effort to troubleshoot, I connected to VPN from home and experienced the same sort of problem. I can connect to my Atlanta facility and receive an IP address; however, I cannot ping anything or access any server in Atlanta. I went into one of my dialer profiles and disabled 'Transparent Tunneling' alltogether. This worked and allow me to access resource but then I noticed access getting extremely slow. I set a ping to ping an Atlanta-side Exchange server and some of the packets timed out or had responses of 4000+ ms. As an added test, I ping an external public IP address and it had the same pings and drops. I was NOT able to ping my local DIR-655 D-Link router due to our policy of disabling Split Tunneling (local LAN access). In an effort to resolve the slowness, I disabled VPN, and logged out of my PC session. I relogged in and tried VPN again. I was able to authenticate and all but access was still slow. After a PC reboot, I tried again and all was STILL slow. I then rebooted and did no VPN, just general web surfing and everything was slow. I ping external IP addresses and the RTTs were in the 4000+ ms range still w/ dropped packets.
I tried a Mac computer which is also on wireless and it was slow to the Internet. I ended up having to reboot my D-Link router and all returned to normal. So it seems like VPN can hose UP my router's connection. THis is very bogus to me and I'd really like to know the resolution. I verified with my company users what devices they have on their home networks and they both verified they were using D-Links (one a DI-524 firmware 3.02 and the other I'm not sure). These users had the authenticate but cannot access resources issue I had but I told them to disable 'Transparent Tunneling' and they are now working correctly. They do get disconnected after 40+ minutes to 4 hours which is still agitating.