Hi everyone,
I am trying to get my computers within the various VLANs in my office to access a NAS on a remote site, as shown in the attached diagram. The office network is properly setup with all VLANs able to access the internet and ping each other.
Currently, I have successfully established a VPN tunnel between the OpenVPN client on our existing Asus AC88U office router and the OpenVPN server hosted on the remote NAS. NAT passthrough is enabled for all VPN traffic in the Asus router.
While the office Asus router is able to ping the NAS, none of the computers in the various VLANs are able to ping/access the NAS.
I have attempted to add static routes in my office Asus router for 10.8.0.0 and 192.168.88.0 but this results in IP conflict warning in the Asus router.
Clearly I'm not a network expert, hence I would like to know if some missing routing configuration is required (perhaps on the remote router and/or the L3 switch)?
Or is this a case of my existing hardware not being able to achieve this?
Thank you in advance for your kind advice.
I am trying to get my computers within the various VLANs in my office to access a NAS on a remote site, as shown in the attached diagram. The office network is properly setup with all VLANs able to access the internet and ping each other.
Currently, I have successfully established a VPN tunnel between the OpenVPN client on our existing Asus AC88U office router and the OpenVPN server hosted on the remote NAS. NAT passthrough is enabled for all VPN traffic in the Asus router.
While the office Asus router is able to ping the NAS, none of the computers in the various VLANs are able to ping/access the NAS.
I have attempted to add static routes in my office Asus router for 10.8.0.0 and 192.168.88.0 but this results in IP conflict warning in the Asus router.
Clearly I'm not a network expert, hence I would like to know if some missing routing configuration is required (perhaps on the remote router and/or the L3 switch)?
Or is this a case of my existing hardware not being able to achieve this?
Thank you in advance for your kind advice.