Giancarlo Razzolini <grazzol...@archlinux.org> on Fri, 2016/12/02 12:33: > Em dezembro 2, 2016 10:25 Christian Hesse escreveu: > > Giancarlo Razzolini <grazzol...@archlinux.org> on Tue, 2016/11/29 17:00: > > > > Sure I do. :-p > > > > But as the cause is known now... Why not just set a password with a > > maximum length of 128 chars? > > Been doing that for a while now. In fact, Maxime, from PIA, told me they'd > change their maximum password size to 128. I've been following the > discussion on the OpenVPN list and it seems they didn't yet reached a > conclusion. So, 2.4.0, will probably not have this fix yet (if they will do > any fix).
The task [0] is still open und unfixed. I doubt a patch for this will make it into final 2.4... > And I'll make time to improve our wiki regarding running OpenVPN entirely > unprivileged. Wondering if this is possible without hard coded interface names... You would have to use %i in openvpn-unprivileged@.service: ExecStartPre=-/usr/bin/openvpn --rmtun --dev %i ExecStartPre=/usr/bin/openvpn --mktun %i ... ExecStart=/usr/bin/openvpn --config %i.conf --dev %i ... However... You should base your work on the new upstream systemd units. [0] https://community.openvpn.net/openvpn/ticket/712 -- main(a){char*c=/* Schoene Gruesse */"B?IJj;MEH" "CX:;",b;for(a/* Best regards my address: */=0;b=c[a++];) putchar(b-1/(/* Chris cc -ox -xc - && ./x */b/42*2-3)*42);}
pgpW80PJLCohj.pgp
Description: OpenPGP digital signature