Hi,
We currently have a number of user using the built in Windows 10 VPN and are having a number of issue with it.
Currently we dont have a Radius server set up.
Issue we are having is the VPN works sometimes and not others, it works sometimes after a user reboots or after we reset there password on the portal.
Has anyone has similar issue and is there any fix for this?
Regards
Gavin
Check out this trouble shooting guide:
https://documentation.meraki.com/MX/Client_VPN/Troubleshooting_Client_VPN
One problem I have had recently in Windows 10 is the VPN getting stuck "connecting" when you connect using the sstem tray in the bottom right hand corner.
If I instead connect using:
Start/Settings/Network and Internet/VPN
Click you VPN connection and then "Connect" it works.
Must be a Windows 10 bug.
This is pretty well known, unfortunately. Windows 10 updates will sometime 'break' the client VPN settings. That part Meraki and rightfully can blame on Microsoft. Meraki does not use current, modern client VPN settings though so to that point they could improve.
If you search a bit deeper here or Google, etc. you will find various stories and workarounds about client VPN with W10. I am just glad I don't Windows desktop support ;). Good luck.
Script the VPN profile creation. It isn't worth your time going through all the troubleshooting to find out that some OS change or update caused the issue. Our first step on the desktop if the client VPN isn't working is to run the script and delete the old profile and create a new one with the right settings.
If you read the most recent member spotlight with @Nash she provided a link to GitHub and her script, which would be a good place to start
Learn more about your community peers in our Member Spotlight!
https://github.com/gammacapricorni/happy-meraki-client-vpn
Just throwing in my two cents here. I've also seen this behaviour and it indeed seems like a windows bug.
When the connection failed I used to reset the TCP/IP stack and it seems like it made it work (type "netsh int ip reset"). Also make sure that in the "Adapter settings" (via Control panel > Network connections) when you right click on the connection > Properties, under the "Security" tab only PAP should be enabled - otherwise (for me at least) it also fails.
If you're using Windows 10, there's also a "Network Reset" function that condenses a number of NIC, TCP/IP and Winsock functions into a single utility. It will reset your NIC(s) to DHCP, so do be warned if you're using a static for some reason.
I believe the Windows commands for that are below, which usually the machine will need a reboot after they are run.
netsh int ip reset
netsh winsock reset
For Windows 7, yes.
For Windows 10, the Network Reset function will also reinstall your network drivers, above and beyond resetting tcp/ip and winsock.