I have 2 LAN A and B, 192.168.11.0/24 and 192.168.14.0/24.
On each LAN, there is a RUTX50 in 192.168.x.254 that is the default gateway.
Both RUTX are managed in RMS.
I have created a RMS VPN hub, added routers, configured routes and created client files.
From computers with OpenVPN client, I can connect to both routers and on devices on each network.
Devices in each network can connect to Internet and ping public addresses.
From each router, I can ping on devices on the other network (192.168.11.254 to 192.168.14.x and 192.168.14.254 to 192.168.11.y)
But a device on network A cannot connect to or ping a device on network B (192.168.11.x to 192.168.14.y).
Thanks for supplying most of the information. I have a few questions regarding the end-devices - what are they? Are they PLCs of some sort, or some other type of electronics?
If understood correctly, you are unable to ping a Network B device from a Network A device, are you able to ping Network A device from a Network B device though?
Devices on networks A and B are Windows computers and embedded Linux systems.
I cannot ping devices on network A from network B and I cannot ping devices on network B from network A, except when I ping from the routers.
In that case, I believe it’ll be more efficient for us to schedule a remote session in private to try and resolve this.
I’ve sent you a form to fill out so we can continue our conversation in private, to avoid accidentally leaking any sensitive information. In the Ticket ID field, simply enter the thread’s number, which is 14101.
We’ve double-checked the routes, and they were configured correctly. We then headed to the Network → Firewall → General settings tab and enabled Masquerading for the LAN => WAN zones on both of the devices, and the pings started going through as expected.