Remote Access Server
Microsoft® Windows® 2000 has extensive support for remote access technology to connect remote clients to corporate networks or the Internet. This chapter describes how remote access works and details how to troubleshoot remote access problems.
This chapter is intended for network engineers and support professionals who are already familiar with TCP/IP, IP routing, IPX routing, and wide area network technology, and assumes that you have read the section about remote access in Windows 2000 Server Help.
In This Chapter
Remote Access Server Architecture
Remote Access and TCP/IP and IPX
Multilink and Bandwidth Allocation Protocol
Remote Access Server and IP Multicast Support
Troubleshooting the Remote Access Server
Related Information in the Resource Kit
For more information about TCP/IP routing, see "Introduction to TCP/IP" in the Microsoft ® Windows ® 2000 Server Resource Kit TCP/IP Core Networking Guide .
For more information about unicast IP routing, see "Unicast IP Routing" in this book.
For more information about IPX routing, see "IPX Routing" in this book.
For more information about demand-dial routing, see "Demand-Dial Routing" in this book.
For more information about virtual private networking, see "Virtual Private Networking" in this book.
Note
This chapter mentions Windows 2000 registry entries. For more information about these registry entries, see the Technical Reference to the Windows 2000 Registry on the Windows 2000 Resource Kit CD-ROM.