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VPN Client Hangs When I Sleep/Resume My Win 2k Dell Latitude D400

Author
3 Mar 2005 7:18 PM
BrianH
Does anyone know why my VPN client often (but not always...) screws up
when I sleep/resume my Win 2k Dell Latitude D400 working via a home
wireless router and NTL Broadband? Doesn't seem to matter whether I
disconnect first then sleep, or sleep while connected, when I resume
and try to reconnect it often hangs before it completes the
registration. Only solution is to reboot.
Brian

Author
3 Mar 2005 7:32 PM
Peter Pan
BrianH wrote:
> Does anyone know why my VPN client often (but not always...) screws up
> when I sleep/resume my Win 2k Dell Latitude D400 working via a home
> wireless router and NTL Broadband? Doesn't seem to matter whether I
> disconnect first then sleep, or sleep while connected, when I resume
> and try to reconnect it often hangs before it completes the
> registration. Only solution is to reboot.
> Brian

It depends on what your sleep is set to.. There are usually settings for
screen saver/hibernate/shut off hard disks... I run off AC and have the
screen saver set to 30 minute, but the hibernate/shut off the hard disks set
to never. Since it's a notebook, if I want to close the lid, it shuts down
anyway (but then it may or may not restart).. Now I just do a shut down,
rather than close the lid.
Author
3 Mar 2005 9:28 PM
dold
BrianH <horton_br***@hotmail.com> wrote:
> Does anyone know why my VPN client often (but not always...) screws up
> when I sleep/resume my Win 2k Dell Latitude D400 working via a home

If I hibernate while VPN is connected, I have to reboot.
If I disconnect VPN before I hibernate, I only have to reconnect.
If I suspend while VPN is connected, I only have to reconnect.

This is Nortel VPN and WindowsXP-SP2.
If you added the wireless, or a new adapter card after you installed VPN,
you might want to uninstall VPN and install it again.
It's supposed to bind to new NICs, but I don't think Nortel does very well.

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Clarence A Dold - Hidden Valley (Lake County) CA USA  38.8,-122.5
Author
5 Mar 2005 6:44 PM
stephen
"BrianH" <horton_br***@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1109877517.789726.50180@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com...
> Does anyone know why my VPN client often (but not always...) screws up
> when I sleep/resume my Win 2k Dell Latitude D400 working via a home
> wireless router and NTL Broadband?

i think it depends on the VPN, settings and how long you suspend for.

i use Cisco VPN clinet into a VPN 3000 server @ work - a quick suspend is
sometimes OK, but usually the link stops working.

Doesn't seem to matter whether I
> disconnect first then sleep, or sleep while connected, when I resume
> and try to reconnect it often hangs before it completes the
> registration. Only solution is to reboot.

i suspect there has to be some background traffic - or the VPN server throws
away the association to the client.

if will reliably reconnect though - but it takes a while to detect a broken
link. you can speed it up by manually dropping the old link and signing on
again.


> Brian
>
--
Regards

Stephen Hope - return address needs fewer xxs
Author
6 Mar 2005 9:23 AM
BrianH
Thanks for the thoughts. I've now changed all my advanced power
settings to Standby rather than Hibernate, and when I resume I can
reconnect to VPN fine. Still don't understand why the difference, but
at least it's sorted (as long as I don't leave the machine in Standby
on battery until the battery gets low enough for it to Hibernate
automatically I assume).
Brian
Author
6 Mar 2005 10:10 AM
Peter Pan
BrianH wrote:
> Thanks for the thoughts. I've now changed all my advanced power
> settings to Standby rather than Hibernate, and when I resume I can
> reconnect to VPN fine. Still don't understand why the difference, but
> at least it's sorted (as long as I don't leave the machine in Standby
> on battery until the battery gets low enough for it to Hibernate
> automatically I assume).
> Brian

Yup, the big offender is usually the hard disk. When it goes into hibernate
rather than standby, it actually turns off, and has to spin back up to
speed.
If you run off AC power plugged in rather than battery, you can just say
hard disk shutdown (on AC never, on Battery xx mins), then you never have to
worry about it dying on battery.
Author
6 Mar 2005 4:21 PM
dold
BrianH <horton_br***@hotmail.com> wrote:
> at least it's sorted (as long as I don't leave the machine in Standby
> on battery until the battery gets low enough for it to Hibernate

That's about the only time I get "caught".  I do have power saver settings
for battery to sleep and then hibernate.  I guess I catch it before the
hibernate.  I only have to reboot after a low power hibernate.

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Clarence A Dold - Hidden Valley (Lake County) CA USA  38.8,-122.5