{"id":427,"date":"2009-03-22T18:39:24","date_gmt":"2009-03-23T02:39:24","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blog.oliverhansen.com\/?p=427"},"modified":"2009-03-22T18:39:24","modified_gmt":"2009-03-23T02:39:24","slug":"routing-and-remote-access-changes-from-automatic-to-disabled","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blog.oliverhansen.com\/index.php\/2009\/03\/22\/routing-and-remote-access-changes-from-automatic-to-disabled\/","title":{"rendered":"Routing and Remote Access Changes From Automatic to Disabled"},"content":{"rendered":"
I’ve been working on setting up an ISA Server 2006 to be a VPN connection for employees. I had it working and then the next day it wouldn’t work. I looked and saw that the Routing and Remote Access service had been not only stopped but disabled. I would turn it back on and then a few hours later it would be disabled. It was really frustrating me. We had used the server for another purpose previously and not reinstalled the OS so I even did that. No luck. The problem kept coming back.<\/p>\n
The link below led me to think of Group Policy and I did an rsop.msc<\/em> on the server to find it was<\/strong> the workstation policy affecting the server. Created a new OU outside the range of the policy which should have been done a long time ago anyways and the problem has been resolved. No more services getting disabled.<\/p>\n