Hello everyone. I recently purchased RV345 VPN Router I am trying to utilize L2TP Server on the appliance to connect with Windows Build in L2TP VPN Client. My issue is I cant connect more than one L2TP VPN Client connection from the same external network. Does L2TP protocol has some kind of limitation or its a RV345 issue . Best Regards

SoftEther VPN supports also L2TP/IPsec VPN Protocol as described here. You can accept L2TP/IPsec VPN Protocol on VPN Server. iOS, Android, Mac OS X or other L2TP/IPsec VPN compatible client devices can connect to your SoftEther VPN Server. Enter PrivateVPN L2TP as Name. Select L2TP/IPSec PSK as Type. Step 7 On Server address, enter a server host name from this list: Server list Sep 16, 2019 · In order to setup L2TP connection on your Huawei Router, follow our step by step guide detailed below: Login to your Router Administrator Console. Connect to the internet and launch the web browser on your computer. You need to know your router’s local IP address to access the administrator login page. Aug 06, 2019 · L2TP Traffic Blocked Outbound¶ In some cases, such as when combined with IPsec, L2TP traffic may also require special handling via floating rules. This appears as blocked traffic in the outbound direction in the firewall logs, showing an L2TP server interface. If this happens, add a floating rule as follows: Navigate to Firewall > Rules

What is L2TP? L2TP stands for Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol, and it doesn’t provide any encryption by itself. L2TP VPN usually uses an authentication protocol, IPSec (Internet Protocol Security), for strong encryption and authentication, which gives it an ultimate edge on some other most used protocols like PPTP.

SoftEther VPN supports also L2TP/IPsec VPN Protocol as described here. You can accept L2TP/IPsec VPN Protocol on VPN Server. iOS, Android, Mac OS X or other L2TP/IPsec VPN compatible client devices can connect to your SoftEther VPN Server.

L2TP (remote access) The Layer Two Tunneling Protocol (L2TP) enables you to provide connections to your network through private tunnels over the internet. The firewall supports L2TP as defined in RFC 3931.

Our experience trying to use L2TP/IPSec on the Cisco RV340 has been a nightmare of frustration! It appear to mangle the PSK and thus never manages to establish the encrypted tunnel fully. It is difficult to debug and certainly is not a pleasure to configure because no combination of settings gets it to work.