On Sat, 2023-08-19 at 22:34 -0400, Walter Dnes wrote:
> Many commercial VPNs claim to support linux. Do they do this at the
> OS level as an executable, or at the browser level as an extension?
The real answer, that I suspect you're looking for, is no. There's no
custom software required in al
On 20/08/2023 03:34, Walter Dnes wrote:
I've been on Gentoo for years and years, but I've never used a VPN, so
consider me an absolute newbie. Canadian big news media has
successfully lobbied our government to implement a link tax. Google has
decided to avoid the tax by not linking to it in
> -Original Message-
> From: Walter Dnes
> Sent: Saturday, August 19, 2023 7:34 PM
> To: Gentoo Users List
> Subject: [gentoo-user] VPN newbie questions
>
> CAUTION: This is an EXTERNAL email. Do not click links or open attachments
> unless you recognize
Michael wrote:
> On Sunday, 20 August 2023 13:58:08 BST Dale wrote:
>> Michael wrote:
>>> OpenVPN is a VPN implementation using OpenSSL to encrypt the end-to-end
>>> network connection between client and server. There are other VPN
>>> implementations and client-server applications using different
On Sunday, 20 August 2023 13:58:08 BST Dale wrote:
> Michael wrote:
> > OpenVPN is a VPN implementation using OpenSSL to encrypt the end-to-end
> > network connection between client and server. There are other VPN
> > implementations and client-server applications using different encryption
> > m
Michael wrote:
> On Sunday, 20 August 2023 11:49:18 BST Walter Dnes wrote:
>> On Sat, Aug 19, 2023 at 10:27:37PM -0500, Dale wrote
>>
>>> I been using Surfshark and openvpn for over a year. They have a pretty
>>> large list of countries, multiple cities in some countries, to pick
>>> from. I deal
On Sunday, 20 August 2023 11:49:18 BST Walter Dnes wrote:
> On Sat, Aug 19, 2023 at 10:27:37PM -0500, Dale wrote
>
> > I been using Surfshark and openvpn for over a year. They have a pretty
> > large list of countries, multiple cities in some countries, to pick
> > from. I deal with torrents and
On Sat, Aug 19, 2023 at 10:27:37PM -0500, Dale wrote
> I been using Surfshark and openvpn for over a year. They have a pretty
> large list of countries, multiple cities in some countries, to pick
> from. I deal with torrents and that is my reason for the need of a VPN,
> just in case some may be
Walter Dnes wrote:
> I've been on Gentoo for years and years, but I've never used a VPN, so
> consider me an absolute newbie. Canadian big news media has
> successfully lobbied our government to implement a link tax. Google has
> decided to avoid the tax by not linking to it in Google search.
I've been on Gentoo for years and years, but I've never used a VPN, so
consider me an absolute newbie. Canadian big news media has
successfully lobbied our government to implement a link tax. Google has
decided to avoid the tax by not linking to it in Google search. This
morning I tried to fin
On 12/23/2013 11:24 AM, Burak Arslan wrote:
>
> If that's the case (big if :)), here's what you need to do:
> http://lartc.org/lartc.html#AEN267
>
Oh, this is the same link I posted later. Impressive guess =)
On Monday 23 Dec 2013 17:44:17 Timur Aydin wrote:
> On 12/23/13 18:24, Burak Arslan wrote:
> > Once the VPN connection is established, among the routes pushed by your
> > OpenVPN provider is also a default gateway entry which routes every
> > non-local packet through the vpn.
>
> Here is the routi
On 12/23/2013 07:04 PM, Michael Orlitzky wrote:
>
> The not-simple solutions are probably going to involve reorganizing your
> network a bit; having a workstation, web server, and VPN client all on
> one box is giving you conflicting requirements. But maybe if you're
> lucky, you have a static pub
On 12/23/2013 12:39 PM, Timur Aydin wrote:
> On 12/23/13 18:12, Michael Orlitzky wrote:
>> Anything you can provide, it's not clear to the rest of us how many
>> computers are involved. Is the web/mail server only the gatway, or is
>> that the workstation that you're using (when, for example, tryin
On 12/23/13 18:24, Burak Arslan wrote:
> Once the VPN connection is established, among the routes pushed by your
> OpenVPN provider is also a default gateway entry which routes every
> non-local packet through the vpn.
Here is the routing setup after the tunnel is up:
bonsai ~ # /etc/init.d/openv
On 12/23/13 18:12, Michael Orlitzky wrote:
> Anything you can provide, it's not clear to the rest of us how many
> computers are involved. Is the web/mail server only the gatway, or is
> that the workstation that you're using (when, for example, trying to
> access the website)?
This is my home net
Selamlar,
On 12/23/13 18:01, Timur Aydin wrote:
> On 12/23/13 17:55, Michael Orlitzky wrote:
>> On 12/23/2013 07:47 AM, Timur Aydin wrote:
>>> Hello everybody,
>>>
>>> I have a gentoo linux PC at home that I am using as my internet gateway.
>>> It is also running a web server and a mail server wit
On 12/23/2013 11:01 AM, Timur Aydin wrote:
>
> I am located in Turkey. The VPN service provider is
> http://www.strongvpn.com and they have servers all over the world. I am
> using their server located in New York. Once I establish the SSL VPN
> tunnel, the NY server effectively becomes my interne
On 12/23/13 17:55, Michael Orlitzky wrote:
> On 12/23/2013 07:47 AM, Timur Aydin wrote:
>> Hello everybody,
>>
>> I have a gentoo linux PC at home that I am using as my internet gateway.
>> It is also running a web server and a mail server with a static IP.
>> Everything is working fine.
>>
>> Now
On 12/23/2013 07:47 AM, Timur Aydin wrote:
> Hello everybody,
>
> I have a gentoo linux PC at home that I am using as my internet gateway.
> It is also running a web server and a mail server with a static IP.
> Everything is working fine.
>
> Now I have installed a VPN server on this system (Open
Hello everybody,
I have a gentoo linux PC at home that I am using as my internet gateway.
It is also running a web server and a mail server with a static IP.
Everything is working fine.
Now I have installed a VPN server on this system (OpenVPN) and I am
using a VPN service provider to get a USA I
Hello everybody,
I have a gentoo linux PC at home that I am using as my internet gateway.
It is also running a web server and a mail server with a static IP.
Everything is working fine.
Now I have installed a VPN server on this system (OpenVPN) and I am
using a VPN service provider to get a USA I
On Sunday 16 Jun 2013 22:49:46 walt wrote:
> A colleague of mine has set up a Mac server just for the purpose
> of being a VPN server for the rest of us at work. So far I can't
> make a good vpn connection from this linux machine or my android
> tablet.
>
> I can log in using a vnc client and pok
A colleague of mine has set up a Mac server just for the purpose
of being a VPN server for the rest of us at work. So far I can't
make a good vpn connection from this linux machine or my android
tablet.
I can log in using a vnc client and poke around in the server
settings, so I know that the ser
I am doing something sort of similar ... use a routing protocol and set
the metrics to make the LAN more attractive so it will get used over the
wifi. Use dhcp to update dns.
I was using ospf (quagga), dns and ISC dhcp which auto-updates bind.
This is "transparent" to the the hosts, is a pain to
Hi,
On Wed, May 22, 2013 at 09:35:30PM +0200, Samuraiii wrote:
> Script was just checking (by sftp with public ssh keys for unprivileged
> account) if LAN (eth or wifi) address is up and if not it just assigned
> address to hostname from vpn range (it did not accounted if machine is
> up or down).
Michael Mol wrote:
> On 05/22/2013 01:36 PM, Michael Orlitzky wrote:
> > On 05/22/13 12:36, Samuraiii wrote:
> >> Hello,
> >>
> >> I am trying to get hostname address resolution on my LAN and VPN with
> >> one serious problem:
> >> I have two "networks" eg. 10.1.1.0 and 10.2.2.0 which are represe
Michael Orlitzky wrote:
> On 05/22/13 12:36, Samuraiii wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > I am trying to get hostname address resolution on my LAN and VPN with
> > one serious problem:
> > I have two "networks" eg. 10.1.1.0 and 10.2.2.0 which are representing
> > local address space for LAN (10.1.1.0/8)
On 05/22/13 15:35, Samuraiii wrote:
> The only result I got was a script which every 5 minutes checked all
> possible addresses of given machine (my "network" is not big at all -
> only eight machines and one network printer). So checking around 20
> addreses is not big deal - but this approach fe
On 2013-05-22 20:52, Michael Orlitzky wrote:
> On 05/22/13 14:30, Samuraiii wrote:
>> I'm sorry for mistake the subnet mask for both spaces IS 255.255.255.0.
>> so it is not overlapping at all.
>> I apologise for my mistake in notation.
>> still this is not (mainly) problem with routing but proble
On 05/22/13 14:30, Samuraiii wrote:
> I'm sorry for mistake the subnet mask for both spaces IS 255.255.255.0.
> so it is not overlapping at all.
> I apologise for my mistake in notation.
> still this is not (mainly) problem with routing but problem with
> assigning name to address.
> If I had super
On 05/22/2013 02:30 PM, Samuraiii wrote:
>
> On 2013-05-22 19:52, Michael Mol wrote:
>> On 05/22/2013 01:36 PM, Michael Orlitzky wrote:
>>> On 05/22/13 12:36, Samuraiii wrote:
Hello,
I am trying to get hostname address resolution on my LAN and VPN with
one serious problem:
On 2013-05-22 19:52, Michael Mol wrote:
> On 05/22/2013 01:36 PM, Michael Orlitzky wrote:
>> On 05/22/13 12:36, Samuraiii wrote:
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> I am trying to get hostname address resolution on my LAN and VPN with
>>> one serious problem:
>>> I have two "networks" eg. 10.1.1.0 and 10.2.2.0 whi
On 05/22/2013 01:36 PM, Michael Orlitzky wrote:
> On 05/22/13 12:36, Samuraiii wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> I am trying to get hostname address resolution on my LAN and VPN with
>> one serious problem:
>> I have two "networks" eg. 10.1.1.0 and 10.2.2.0 which are representing
>> local address space for LA
On 05/22/13 12:36, Samuraiii wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am trying to get hostname address resolution on my LAN and VPN with
> one serious problem:
> I have two "networks" eg. 10.1.1.0 and 10.2.2.0 which are representing
> local address space for LAN (10.1.1.0/8) and VPN address space (10.2.2.0/8).
Thi
Hello,
I am trying to get hostname address resolution on my LAN and VPN with
one serious problem:
I have two "networks" eg. 10.1.1.0 and 10.2.2.0 which are representing
local address space for LAN (10.1.1.0/8) and VPN address space (10.2.2.0/8).
Every host has its own address "suffix" (eg. host fo
Hi,
On Sat, 27 Aug 2005, Michael W. Holdeman wrote:
I have a dyndns account, it keeps the dns updted. I can always get to my
router/gateway which is dyndns enabled, how do I get to my ip on the server,
set up port forwarding on the router. Most router-in-a-box appliances will
let you configu
Hi,
On Sat, 27 Aug 2005, Bryan Whitehead wrote:
Get dyndns working on one end... and then use ppp over ssh... :)
http: //www.csh.rit.edu/~psionic/articles/ppp-over-ssh/
http: //www.faqs.org/docs/Linux-mini/ppp-ssh.html
Nah, don't do that. It will introduce major issues reg. connection
stabi
On Saturday 27 August 2005 04:12, Michael W. Holdeman wrote:
> OK I have read the vpn howto, and tunneling from the howto, and to be
> truthfull i am totally over my head.
http://www.natecarlson.com/linux/ipsec-x509.php
As long as the server has a static address, you'll be fine.
Doesn't even matt
Am Samstag, den 27.08.2005, 00:32 -0400 schrieb Michael Crute:
> On 8/27/05, David Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've been having alot of luck with openvpn it's ssl based
> rather than
> ipsec. I have found it to be easier to setup and less
> confusing and
>
Get dyndns working on one end... and then use ppp over ssh... :)
http://www.csh.rit.edu/~psionic/articles/ppp-over-ssh/
http://www.faqs.org/docs/Linux-mini/ppp-ssh.html
On Sat, 27 Aug 2005, Michael W. Holdeman wrote:
I have a dyndns account, it keeps the dns updted. I can always get to my
rout
On 8/27/05, David Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I've been having alot of luck with openvpn it's ssl based rather thanipsec. I have found it to be easier to setup and less confusing andit has clients for various platforms including windows...which is notalways the easiest platform to use IPSEC
I have a dyndns account, it keeps the dns updted. I can always get to my
router/gateway which is dyndns enabled, how do I get to my ip on the server,
I need to mount the servers nfs export throught the router. I setup the
correct ports for nfs to foreward, is that it?
If I can do that it would
I've been having alot of luck with openvpn it's ssl based rather than
ipsec. I have found it to be easier to setup and less confusing and
it has clients for various platforms including windows...which is not
always the easiest platform to use IPSEC with unless you go with a
commercial client. You
On Friday 26 August 2005 10:12 pm, Michael W. Holdeman wrote:
> I want to be able to access a desktop machine, and most importantly the bsd
> file server with my laptop, again with a dynamic assigned ip from remote
> locations.
I suggest one of those trendy dynamic DNS services (or a _real
OK I have read the vpn howto, and tunneling from the howto, and to be
truthfull i am totally over my head.
I have a LAN at the office including a freebsd file server, the server has an
ip of 192.168.xx.xx, and several other gentoo desktops have the same +1 each.
I have a linksys cable modem, an
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