Microsoft KB Archive/164052

= PPTP and Interoperability with Other Local Machine Services =

Article ID: 164052

Article Last Modified on 6/17/2003

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APPLIES TO


 * Microsoft Windows NT Server 4.0 Standard Edition

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This article was previously published under Q164052





SYMPTOMS
If a Microsoft Windows NT Server service, such as a Proxy server, DHCP server, web, FTP and so forth, is installed on a computer running Windows NT Server 4.0 (which has IP Forwarding enabled) that also employs Point- to- Point Tunneling Protocol (PPTP) filtering on an interface, no requests can be resolved through that filtered interface unless the client is PPTP enabled. This is to protect the computer from attack from Internet sources.



RESOLUTION
A change has been made in Windows NT Service Pack 2 (SP2) that enables the PPTP service to allow packets to services running on the computer running Windows NT Server. If a registry parameter is set, PPTP will allow packets on a PPTP filtering enabled interface to reach the local machine.

This allows RAS (PPTP) and Proxy servers (or any other server services) to be enabled at the same time, without the fear of the protected network being attacked from the Internet due to packet forwarding.

To protect the private network:

 Install Service Pack 2 (or later) for Windows NT Server 4.0. Enable PPTP filtering by checking the Enable PPTP Filtering check box in the Advanced TCP/IP properties of the Network Control Panel. This setting does not allow any packets other than PPTP to come and go out of that interface. To allow clients on the Internet to access services running on the Windows NT computer, change the following registry parameter and restart the machine.

WARNING: Using Registry Editor incorrectly can cause serious, system- wide problems that may require you to reinstall Windows NT to correct them. Microsoft cannot guarantee that any problems resulting from the use of Registry Editor can be solved. Use this tool at your own risk.

 Open the Registry Editor (Regedt32.exe).  Go to the following location in the Registry and add the following value:         HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\RASPPTPF \Parameters\

Value Name: AllowPacketsForLocalMachine Data Type: REG_DWORD Data: 1 </ol> </li></ol>

With this additional setting, PPTP clients can connect to the local computer from the Internet. Computers on the Internet can see this server, and can access services (FTP, WWW, and so forth) running on this server. However, computers on the Internet cannot see past the server.

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STATUS
Microsoft has confirmed this to be a problem in Microsoft Windows NT version 4.0. This problem is corrected in Windows NT 4.0 U.S. Service Pack <ol> For information on obtaining the Service Pack, query on the following word in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:

SERVPACK

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MORE INFORMATION
The following are considerations when applying the PPTP filter.

On a multi-homed machine, PPTP filtering should be enabled on the network interface over which the PPTP connection is being made.

In the example of using PPTP internally to tunnel out to the Internet, you would enable PPTP filtering on the LAN adapter attached to your network. This configuration allows only PPTP control/data packets to pass between the LAN and the Internet, making the PPTP RAS server act like a firewall.

If the tunnel is being made from an ISP over the Internet to a multi-homed RAS server on the LAN, PPTP filtering would be enabled on the Internet adapter.

Additional query words: prodnt multihomed

Keywords: kbbug kbfix kbnetwork kbusage KB164052

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