![]() One in the 192.168.*.* range and one in the 10.*.*.* range, and it will either not know which one to connect to, or it will take the most recent entry. So if you have the VPN server on the router enabled, and you connect to it via your Mac, running a VPN client on the Mac, while residing on the local network anyway, the Mac will see EVERY device on your local network as having multiple IPs. One system on the network will be the "Master Browser" and feed location (IP) and resolution (DEVICE NAME) data to all the other systems on the network, by way of a vote. I have no experience with MacOS, but I do know Windows keeps a cache of NETWORK ID's with regards devices and their associated IP addresses. ![]() ![]() This will cause a conflict, as multiple devices on your network will appear to have multiple IP addresses. It is not intended for use by devices on your local network, to access other devices already on your local network. The VPN functionality on this router, exists (as previously stated) to connect to your network from a REMOTE location, i.e: over the internet. The other scenario would be (as I see it based on your post) that your attempting to start the VPN on your mac, while still connected to the local network.
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