473,769 Members | 8,132 Online
Bytes | Software Development & Data Engineering Community
+ Post

Home Posts Topics Members FAQ

Conversion from VB 6 to VB.NET 2005

Hi all,

I am trying to convert a VB 6 application to VB.NET 2005 using the wizard.
It has over 20 forms and I've used Option Explicit everywhere, hence
variables are properly declared and used. I also made sure that there was no
design time (ItemData) listings in the list. However, when I try to convert
to .NET, two things happen:

a) It gives me over 5500 errors!! (Many of them include 'could not resolve
type' inspite of explicit declarations)
b) It quits halfway with a message like "An exception has occurred". The
usual Report to MS crops up and at the end of it, I am left with over 5500
baffling errors and a failed attempt at conversion.

My questions are:

a) Is there anything I can do in the existing VB 6 program to ease the
conversion process?
b) Any sites on the web that provide a lot of information on this?
c) Does anybody know why the thing quit halfway through the conversion?
d) This is a live project that I developed an year back and is likely to be
used for a long time to come. Is it necessary that I take the pains to learn
and shift the application to .NET?

If I need to send the report (over 2 MB!!!) please let me know.

Would appreciate any insight into this.

Vince
Nov 21 '05 #1
9 1451
"Vince" <sd***@fsd.co m> schrieb im:
I am trying to convert a VB 6 application to VB.NET
2005 using the wizard.
Notice that this is still Beta software!
a) Is there anything I can do in the existing VB 6 program to
ease the conversion process?
Micrososoft Visual Basic Code Advisor
<URL:http://msdn.microsoft. com/library/en-us/dnvb600/html/vb6_FixItRuleTo ol.asp>
b) Any sites on the web that provide a lot of information on this?
<URL:http://msdn.microsoft. com/vbasic/using/migrating/>
d) This is a live project that I developed an year back and
is likely to be used for a long time to come. Is it necessary
that I take the pains to learn and shift the application to .NET?


If the project is split up into multiple components, you can start
converting some of the DLLs, make them usable from COM and use then instead
of the ActiveX DLLs.

--
Herfried K. Wagner [MVP]
<URL:http://dotnet.mvps.org/>

Nov 21 '05 #2
Vince,

VBNet 2005 does not exist
VBNet 2005 Beta exist, so you showed that the conversion is not yet what it
maybe would be.

A very good newsgroup for discussions about that is
http://communities.microsoft.com/new...idbey&slcid=us

Just my 2 eurocents

Cor

"Vince" <sd***@fsd.co m>
Hi all,

I am trying to convert a VB 6 application to VB.NET 2005 using the wizard.
It has over 20 forms and I've used Option Explicit everywhere, hence
variables are properly declared and used. I also made sure that there was
no
design time (ItemData) listings in the list. However, when I try to
convert
to .NET, two things happen:

a) It gives me over 5500 errors!! (Many of them include 'could not resolve
type' inspite of explicit declarations)
b) It quits halfway with a message like "An exception has occurred". The
usual Report to MS crops up and at the end of it, I am left with over 5500
baffling errors and a failed attempt at conversion.

My questions are:

a) Is there anything I can do in the existing VB 6 program to ease the
conversion process?
b) Any sites on the web that provide a lot of information on this?
c) Does anybody know why the thing quit halfway through the conversion?
d) This is a live project that I developed an year back and is likely to
be
used for a long time to come. Is it necessary that I take the pains to
learn
and shift the application to .NET?

If I need to send the report (over 2 MB!!!) please let me know.

Would appreciate any insight into this.

Vince

Nov 21 '05 #3
Thanks for the links & info Cor & Herfried.
I wanted to migrate to VB.NET but since its new brother (2005) is in town,
it's hard for me to think 2003, although 2005 is still a beta.
Vince
"Cor Ligthert" <no************ @planet.nl> wrote in message
news:uq******** ******@TK2MSFTN GP15.phx.gbl...
Vince,

VBNet 2005 does not exist
VBNet 2005 Beta exist, so you showed that the conversion is not yet what it maybe would be.

A very good newsgroup for discussions about that is
http://communities.microsoft.com/new...idbey&slcid=us
Just my 2 eurocents

Cor

"Vince" <sd***@fsd.co m>
Hi all,

I am trying to convert a VB 6 application to VB.NET 2005 using the wizard. It has over 20 forms and I've used Option Explicit everywhere, hence
variables are properly declared and used. I also made sure that there was no
design time (ItemData) listings in the list. However, when I try to
convert
to .NET, two things happen:

a) It gives me over 5500 errors!! (Many of them include 'could not resolve type' inspite of explicit declarations)
b) It quits halfway with a message like "An exception has occurred". The
usual Report to MS crops up and at the end of it, I am left with over 5500 baffling errors and a failed attempt at conversion.

My questions are:

a) Is there anything I can do in the existing VB 6 program to ease the
conversion process?
b) Any sites on the web that provide a lot of information on this?
c) Does anybody know why the thing quit halfway through the conversion?
d) This is a live project that I developed an year back and is likely to
be
used for a long time to come. Is it necessary that I take the pains to
learn
and shift the application to .NET?

If I need to send the report (over 2 MB!!!) please let me know.

Would appreciate any insight into this.

Vince


Nov 21 '05 #4
On Mon, 11 Oct 2004 14:13:05 +0800, Vince wrote:
I am trying to convert a VB 6 application to VB.NET 2005 using the wizard.
It has over 20 forms and I've used Option Explicit everywhere, hence


Since your VB6 project is more than 20 forms, I presume that it is a large
application. Even if the conversion wizard completed without any errors,
it is likely that the result would be less than optimal.

Is it absolutely necessary that the app be converted to .Net? If not, I
would recommend keeping the app in VB6 and then begin to convert or
redesign the next version of the app to fit the VB.Net design paradigm.

--
Chris

dunawayc[AT]sbcglobal_lunch meat_[DOT]net

To send me an E-mail, remove the "[", "]", underscores ,lunchmeat, and
replace certain words in my E-Mail address.
Nov 21 '05 #5
Nak
Hi Vince,
it's hard for me to think 2003, although 2005 is still a beta.
Vince


It's a risky and extremely frustrating process developing software with
a beta IDE, rather you than me!

Nick.
Nov 21 '05 #6
I just completed converting a project to .NET 2003 that was a large project
and let me tell you, it is no trivial undertaking. If I had it to do over
again, I would leave it and try to design a new project along the lines of
"little at a time" variety.

The problem with writing your new DLL's in .net and making them COM
compatible, is that it is difficult to debug between the two platforms (vb6
and .NET). .NET doesn't do this very well were the projects are very large.
This methodology is okay for smaller DLL's were you can test them fully in a
..NET test harness before moving them over to VB6 but is totally cumbersome
for larger DLL's.
Designing .NET test harnesses for your larger DLL's can be time consuming
which begs the question: do I really need to do this. If not, leave it and
let that VB6 code hang around as long as it is useful.
Along with porting this app to .NET, I also ported the ActiveX DLL's so at
least now, I've got a bunch of .NET asymblies that are useful. However,
there was more than one time that I thought the whole project would fail.

As for all those error messages that you get from the compiler, I just had
to walk my way through them fixing them one at a time. There were some that
didn't even really need fixing but the converter thought there was a
problem. Nothing like doing a little desk checking I suppose huh?

Steve

"Chris Dunaway" <"dunawayc[[at]_lunchmeat_sbcg lobal[dot]]net"> wrote in
message news:tm******** *************** *****@40tude.ne t...
On Mon, 11 Oct 2004 14:13:05 +0800, Vince wrote:
I am trying to convert a VB 6 application to VB.NET 2005 using the wizard. It has over 20 forms and I've used Option Explicit everywhere, hence


Since your VB6 project is more than 20 forms, I presume that it is a large
application. Even if the conversion wizard completed without any errors,
it is likely that the result would be less than optimal.

Is it absolutely necessary that the app be converted to .Net? If not, I
would recommend keeping the app in VB6 and then begin to convert or
redesign the next version of the app to fit the VB.Net design paradigm.

--
Chris

dunawayc[AT]sbcglobal_lunch meat_[DOT]net

To send me an E-mail, remove the "[", "]", underscores ,lunchmeat, and
replace certain words in my E-Mail address.

Nov 21 '05 #7
Steve,
Designing .NET test harnesses for your larger DLL's can be time consuming
which begs the question: do I really need to do this.
Absolutely!!! Especially when you write the tests first, then the code.
Which is the methodology behind TDD (Test Driven Development). NOTE: With
TDD you do not write a "test harness" per se, you use an existing "test
harness" such as NUnit or csUnit, you do however write a suite of tests
(simply methods with asserts in them) that test your classes & all the
methods.

I'm using NUnit 2.2 http://www.nunit.org/ and like it better then earlier
versions (of NUnit). VS.NET 2005 Team System will have a TDD tool built-in
http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/de.../vsts-test.asp.

I've been using TDD more and more over the last year or so. I find Daniel
Cazzulino's comment to be my findings also:
http://weblogs.asp.net/cazzu/archive...07/239449.aspx

I recently starting reading James W. Newkirk & Alexei A. Vorontsov's book
"Test-Driven Development in Microsoft .NET" which explains TDD in the
context of .NET, I would highly recommend this book!

Of course if you don't have the tests to begin with, then you may have your
work cut out for you...

NOTE: I would not migrate a VB6 project to .NET simply to be on .NET, I
would migrate the project so that I can leverage the full OO that .NET has
to offer. I have a couple of substantial (100s of classes) projects that I
have migrated. I find using Refactoring (http://www.refactoring.com) on the
migrated project to be an "easier" method of redesigning the app, rather
then design a brand new project in VB.NET...

Hope this helps
Jay

"Steve Long" <St**********@N oSpam.com> wrote in message
news:OG******** *******@TK2MSFT NGP12.phx.gbl.. .I just completed converting a project to .NET 2003 that was a large project
and let me tell you, it is no trivial undertaking. If I had it to do over
again, I would leave it and try to design a new project along the lines of
"little at a time" variety.

The problem with writing your new DLL's in .net and making them COM
compatible, is that it is difficult to debug between the two platforms
(vb6
and .NET). .NET doesn't do this very well were the projects are very
large.
This methodology is okay for smaller DLL's were you can test them fully in
a
.NET test harness before moving them over to VB6 but is totally cumbersome
for larger DLL's.
Designing .NET test harnesses for your larger DLL's can be time consuming
which begs the question: do I really need to do this. If not, leave it and
let that VB6 code hang around as long as it is useful.
Along with porting this app to .NET, I also ported the ActiveX DLL's so at
least now, I've got a bunch of .NET asymblies that are useful. However,
there was more than one time that I thought the whole project would fail.

As for all those error messages that you get from the compiler, I just had
to walk my way through them fixing them one at a time. There were some
that
didn't even really need fixing but the converter thought there was a
problem. Nothing like doing a little desk checking I suppose huh?

Steve

"Chris Dunaway" <"dunawayc[[at]_lunchmeat_sbcg lobal[dot]]net"> wrote in
message news:tm******** *************** *****@40tude.ne t...
On Mon, 11 Oct 2004 14:13:05 +0800, Vince wrote:
> I am trying to convert a VB 6 application to VB.NET 2005 using the wizard. > It has over 20 forms and I've used Option Explicit everywhere, hence


Since your VB6 project is more than 20 forms, I presume that it is a
large
application. Even if the conversion wizard completed without any errors,
it is likely that the result would be less than optimal.

Is it absolutely necessary that the app be converted to .Net? If not, I
would recommend keeping the app in VB6 and then begin to convert or
redesign the next version of the app to fit the VB.Net design paradigm.

--
Chris

dunawayc[AT]sbcglobal_lunch meat_[DOT]net

To send me an E-mail, remove the "[", "]", underscores ,lunchmeat, and
replace certain words in my E-Mail address.


Nov 21 '05 #8
Good info Jay. Thanks.
Steve

"Jay B. Harlow [MVP - Outlook]" <Ja************ @msn.com> wrote in message
news:ui******** ******@TK2MSFTN GP09.phx.gbl...
Steve,
Designing .NET test harnesses for your larger DLL's can be time consuming which begs the question: do I really need to do this.
Absolutely!!! Especially when you write the tests first, then the code.
Which is the methodology behind TDD (Test Driven Development). NOTE: With
TDD you do not write a "test harness" per se, you use an existing "test
harness" such as NUnit or csUnit, you do however write a suite of tests
(simply methods with asserts in them) that test your classes & all the
methods.

I'm using NUnit 2.2 http://www.nunit.org/ and like it better then earlier
versions (of NUnit). VS.NET 2005 Team System will have a TDD tool built-in

http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/de.../vsts-test.asp.
I've been using TDD more and more over the last year or so. I find Daniel
Cazzulino's comment to be my findings also:
http://weblogs.asp.net/cazzu/archive...07/239449.aspx

I recently starting reading James W. Newkirk & Alexei A. Vorontsov's book
"Test-Driven Development in Microsoft .NET" which explains TDD in the
context of .NET, I would highly recommend this book!

Of course if you don't have the tests to begin with, then you may have your work cut out for you...

NOTE: I would not migrate a VB6 project to .NET simply to be on .NET, I
would migrate the project so that I can leverage the full OO that .NET has
to offer. I have a couple of substantial (100s of classes) projects that I
have migrated. I find using Refactoring (http://www.refactoring.com) on the migrated project to be an "easier" method of redesigning the app, rather
then design a brand new project in VB.NET...

Hope this helps
Jay

"Steve Long" <St**********@N oSpam.com> wrote in message
news:OG******** *******@TK2MSFT NGP12.phx.gbl.. .
I just completed converting a project to .NET 2003 that was a large project and let me tell you, it is no trivial undertaking. If I had it to do over again, I would leave it and try to design a new project along the lines of "little at a time" variety.

The problem with writing your new DLL's in .net and making them COM
compatible, is that it is difficult to debug between the two platforms
(vb6
and .NET). .NET doesn't do this very well were the projects are very
large.
This methodology is okay for smaller DLL's were you can test them fully in a
.NET test harness before moving them over to VB6 but is totally cumbersome for larger DLL's.
Designing .NET test harnesses for your larger DLL's can be time consuming which begs the question: do I really need to do this. If not, leave it and let that VB6 code hang around as long as it is useful.
Along with porting this app to .NET, I also ported the ActiveX DLL's so at least now, I've got a bunch of .NET asymblies that are useful. However,
there was more than one time that I thought the whole project would fail.
As for all those error messages that you get from the compiler, I just had to walk my way through them fixing them one at a time. There were some
that
didn't even really need fixing but the converter thought there was a
problem. Nothing like doing a little desk checking I suppose huh?

Steve

"Chris Dunaway" <"dunawayc[[at]_lunchmeat_sbcg lobal[dot]]net"> wrote in
message news:tm******** *************** *****@40tude.ne t...
On Mon, 11 Oct 2004 14:13:05 +0800, Vince wrote:

> I am trying to convert a VB 6 application to VB.NET 2005 using the

wizard.
> It has over 20 forms and I've used Option Explicit everywhere, hence

Since your VB6 project is more than 20 forms, I presume that it is a
large
application. Even if the conversion wizard completed without any errors, it is likely that the result would be less than optimal.

Is it absolutely necessary that the app be converted to .Net? If not, I would recommend keeping the app in VB6 and then begin to convert or
redesign the next version of the app to fit the VB.Net design paradigm.

--
Chris

dunawayc[AT]sbcglobal_lunch meat_[DOT]net

To send me an E-mail, remove the "[", "]", underscores ,lunchmeat, and
replace certain words in my E-Mail address.



Nov 21 '05 #9
Thanks a lot everybody for the info. I'll invest some 4 days more in testing
and reading through the links. If it turns out to be Mission Impossible,
I'll develop the next version in .NET.
Vince
"Steve Long" <St**********@N oSpam.com> wrote in message
news:%2******** *********@TK2MS FTNGP12.phx.gbl ...
Good info Jay. Thanks.
Steve

"Jay B. Harlow [MVP - Outlook]" <Ja************ @msn.com> wrote in message
news:ui******** ******@TK2MSFTN GP09.phx.gbl...
Steve,
Designing .NET test harnesses for your larger DLL's can be time consuming which begs the question: do I really need to do this.
Absolutely!!! Especially when you write the tests first, then the code.
Which is the methodology behind TDD (Test Driven Development). NOTE: With
TDD you do not write a "test harness" per se, you use an existing "test
harness" such as NUnit or csUnit, you do however write a suite of tests
(simply methods with asserts in them) that test your classes & all the
methods.

I'm using NUnit 2.2 http://www.nunit.org/ and like it better then earlier versions (of NUnit). VS.NET 2005 Team System will have a TDD tool built-in

http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/de.../vsts-test.asp.

I've been using TDD more and more over the last year or so. I find Daniel Cazzulino's comment to be my findings also:
http://weblogs.asp.net/cazzu/archive...07/239449.aspx

I recently starting reading James W. Newkirk & Alexei A. Vorontsov's book "Test-Driven Development in Microsoft .NET" which explains TDD in the
context of .NET, I would highly recommend this book!

Of course if you don't have the tests to begin with, then you may have

your
work cut out for you...

NOTE: I would not migrate a VB6 project to .NET simply to be on .NET, I
would migrate the project so that I can leverage the full OO that .NET has to offer. I have a couple of substantial (100s of classes) projects that I have migrated. I find using Refactoring (http://www.refactoring.com) on

the
migrated project to be an "easier" method of redesigning the app, rather
then design a brand new project in VB.NET...

Hope this helps
Jay

"Steve Long" <St**********@N oSpam.com> wrote in message
news:OG******** *******@TK2MSFT NGP12.phx.gbl.. .
I just completed converting a project to .NET 2003 that was a large

project and let me tell you, it is no trivial undertaking. If I had it to do over again, I would leave it and try to design a new project along the lines of
"little at a time" variety.

The problem with writing your new DLL's in .net and making them COM
compatible, is that it is difficult to debug between the two platforms
(vb6
and .NET). .NET doesn't do this very well were the projects are very
large.
This methodology is okay for smaller DLL's were you can test them
fully
in a
.NET test harness before moving them over to VB6 but is totally cumbersome for larger DLL's.
Designing .NET test harnesses for your larger DLL's can be time consuming which begs the question: do I really need to do this. If not, leave it and let that VB6 code hang around as long as it is useful.
Along with porting this app to .NET, I also ported the ActiveX DLL's
so
at least now, I've got a bunch of .NET asymblies that are useful.
However, there was more than one time that I thought the whole project would
fail.
As for all those error messages that you get from the compiler, I just had to walk my way through them fixing them one at a time. There were some
that
didn't even really need fixing but the converter thought there was a
problem. Nothing like doing a little desk checking I suppose huh?

Steve

"Chris Dunaway" <"dunawayc[[at]_lunchmeat_sbcg lobal[dot]]net"> wrote in message news:tm******** *************** *****@40tude.ne t...
> On Mon, 11 Oct 2004 14:13:05 +0800, Vince wrote:
>
> > I am trying to convert a VB 6 application to VB.NET 2005 using the
wizard.
> > It has over 20 forms and I've used Option Explicit everywhere, hence>
> Since your VB6 project is more than 20 forms, I presume that it is a
> large
> application. Even if the conversion wizard completed without any errors,> it is likely that the result would be less than optimal.
>
> Is it absolutely necessary that the app be converted to .Net? If not, I
> would recommend keeping the app in VB6 and then begin to convert or
> redesign the next version of the app to fit the VB.Net design

paradigm.>
> --
> Chris
>
> dunawayc[AT]sbcglobal_lunch meat_[DOT]net
>
> To send me an E-mail, remove the "[", "]", underscores ,lunchmeat, and> replace certain words in my E-Mail address.



Nov 21 '05 #10

This thread has been closed and replies have been disabled. Please start a new discussion.

Similar topics

14
9328
by: junky_fellow | last post by:
Can anybody please explain this: When a value with integer type is converted to another integer type other than _Bool, if the new type is unsigned, the value is converted by repeatedly adding or subtracting one more than the maximum value that can be represented in the new type until the value is in the range of the new type.
7
6500
by: Sanjay Kedare | last post by:
Hi, I am evaluating various alternatives of converting Delphi (Ver 4.0) screens to C# screens. Are there any tools available for such conversion? if yes how much conversion do they achieve? The number of screens to be converted are huge, we are aiming minimum regression impact. What could be the best approach? Currently the option of Delphi.Net is ruled out.
11
1712
by: Peter Oliphant | last post by:
I've been trying all morning to convert my 2003 project (managed) to 2005 (/clr since I have both managed and unmanaged code). I'm guessing I have tens of thousands of lines of code to change. Did a lot of converting '__gc' to 'ref', converting '*' to '^', converting 'new' to 'gcnew'. Of course this can't be done with a blanket replace, as my code has both managed and unmanaged segments. Thus I have to do them one-by-one. Also, things are...
47
2876
by: rawCoder | last post by:
Hi, Just wanted to know if there is any speed difference between VB conversion Keywords like CInt, Clng, CStr, CDbl, CBool etc. ..NETs Convert.To<...> methods. And which is better to be used and why ? Thanx
1
1766
by: musosdev | last post by:
Hi I've got a project I've just run through the conversion wizard, and it's giving me a few headaches. I've got a user control which has controls referrenced from its calling page (usercontrol1.textbox1.text etc). All worked fine in V2003, but 2005 is giving me a "usercontro1.textbox1 is inaccessible due to it's protection level" error. Obviously, with it now
4
2183
by: Coleen | last post by:
Hi All :-) I'm new to this site. I've been trying to convert several .Net 2003 web applications and getting tons of conversion errors. I found this site to help walk me through the conversion process: http://webproject.scottgu.com/VisualBasic/Migration2/Migration2.aspx which is great, however, when I follow the steps in this tutorial exactly, I get 102 conversion errors! Almost all the errors have to do with ambiguous file names, but...
6
4816
by: Blasting Cap | last post by:
I'm trying to convert a 1.1 app to 2.0, and keep finding one thing after another that either Framework 2.0 or Visual Studio 2005 doesn't like. Now this - In the global.asax, code that has been running for nearly 4 years now is giving me a problem. The code is supposed to give the user a "clean" page with a login link on it and send an email to me when an app blows up. It also is supposed to write to the event log too.
5
3011
by: Randy | last post by:
I've converted a VS 2003 project to VS 2005. I have one utility class that it put in the APP_CODE directory. When I try and compile I'm getting this error... Error 1 The type or namespace name 'WelcomeToPFP' could not be found (are you missing a using directive or an assembly reference?) C:\Inetpub\wwwroot\PFPApp\App_Code\Utils.cs 19 9 WelcomeToPFP is a class defined in the root directory of the solution. My question is...I'm drawing a...
5
2121
by: Ivan Velev | last post by:
Hello, Minimal example below - it gives me different output if I comment / uncomment the extra time.mktime call - note that this call is not related in any way to main logic flow. When "problematicStamp = ..." is commented I get gmtStamp: 1130634600.0
0
9414
by: Hystou | last post by:
Most computers default to English, but sometimes we require a different language, especially when relocating. Forgot to request a specific language before your computer shipped? No problem! You can effortlessly switch the default language on Windows 10 without reinstalling. I'll walk you through it. First, let's disable language synchronization. With a Microsoft account, language settings sync across devices. To prevent any complications,...
0
9848
tracyyun
by: tracyyun | last post by:
Dear forum friends, With the development of smart home technology, a variety of wireless communication protocols have appeared on the market, such as Zigbee, Z-Wave, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, etc. Each protocol has its own unique characteristics and advantages, but as a user who is planning to build a smart home system, I am a bit confused by the choice of these technologies. I'm particularly interested in Zigbee because I've heard it does some...
0
8860
agi2029
by: agi2029 | last post by:
Let's talk about the concept of autonomous AI software engineers and no-code agents. These AIs are designed to manage the entire lifecycle of a software development project—planning, coding, testing, and deployment—without human intervention. Imagine an AI that can take a project description, break it down, write the code, debug it, and then launch it, all on its own.... Now, this would greatly impact the work of software developers. The idea...
1
7391
isladogs
by: isladogs | last post by:
The next Access Europe User Group meeting will be on Wednesday 1 May 2024 starting at 18:00 UK time (6PM UTC+1) and finishing by 19:30 (7.30PM). In this session, we are pleased to welcome a new presenter, Adolph Dupré who will be discussing some powerful techniques for using class modules. He will explain when you may want to use classes instead of User Defined Types (UDT). For example, to manage the data in unbound forms. Adolph will...
0
6661
by: conductexam | last post by:
I have .net C# application in which I am extracting data from word file and save it in database particularly. To store word all data as it is I am converting the whole word file firstly in HTML and then checking html paragraph one by one. At the time of converting from word file to html my equations which are in the word document file was convert into image. Globals.ThisAddIn.Application.ActiveDocument.Select();...
0
5293
by: TSSRALBI | last post by:
Hello I'm a network technician in training and I need your help. I am currently learning how to create and manage the different types of VPNs and I have a question about LAN-to-LAN VPNs. The last exercise I practiced was to create a LAN-to-LAN VPN between two Pfsense firewalls, by using IPSEC protocols. I succeeded, with both firewalls in the same network. But I'm wondering if it's possible to do the same thing, with 2 Pfsense firewalls...
0
5432
by: adsilva | last post by:
A Windows Forms form does not have the event Unload, like VB6. What one acts like?
2
3549
muto222
by: muto222 | last post by:
How can i add a mobile payment intergratation into php mysql website.
3
2810
bsmnconsultancy
by: bsmnconsultancy | last post by:
In today's digital era, a well-designed website is crucial for businesses looking to succeed. Whether you're a small business owner or a large corporation in Toronto, having a strong online presence can significantly impact your brand's success. BSMN Consultancy, a leader in Website Development in Toronto offers valuable insights into creating effective websites that not only look great but also perform exceptionally well. In this comprehensive...

By using Bytes.com and it's services, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.

To disable or enable advertisements and analytics tracking please visit the manage ads & tracking page.