Hi Ed:

 I don't know but I will ask Dru Lavigne and see what she says.

On 8/30/05, Ed Howland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Jon,
> 
> This is great. We have a question about VPNs. We want to create a VPN
> gateway between the library and Robert's  machine (cwelug.org) . SSH
> tunnels are not enough, because we can only forward one port at a time
> and we can't make FTP work because it needs a second outgoing port to be
> tunnelled (in PASV mode.)
> 
> What software should we use? I know about FreeSWAN and OpenVPN.
> 
> Thanks,
> Ed
> 
> Jon Drews wrote:
> 
> >Hi:
> >
> >  I did some experiments with running UNIX laptops in adhoc mode and
> >projecting X apps from one to the other. I thought I would send in
> >what I did in light of the previous interest about VPN and Linux thin
> >clients.
> >
> >I had an OpenBSD laptop and a FreeBSD laptop. Here is what I did to
> >get the FreeBSD laptop to use the X applications from the OpenBSD
> >laptop.
> >
> >On the OpenBSD laptop I did this:
> >
> >$ /usr/bin/sudo ifconfig wi0 inet 192.168.0.4 netmask 255.255.255.0 nwid
> cwelug
> >mediaopt adhoc
> >
> >and on the FreeBSD laptop I did:
> ># ifconfig wi0 inet 192.168.0.3 netmask 255.255.255.0 ssid cwelug
> >mediaopt adhoc
> >
> >NOTE: the laptops cannot be connected to any other network for this
> >adhoc mode to work.
> >Also note that "nwid" is a synonym for "ssid".
> >
> >I had the appropriate entries in my /etc/hosts files. For FreeBSD that
> would be:
> >127.0.0.1               mobile.silbsd.org localhost.silbsd.org localhost
> >192.168.0.3             mobile.silbsd.org mobile
> >192.168.0.4             notebook.silbsd.org notebook 
> >
> >notebook is the OpenBSD laptop and mobile is the FreeBSD laptop.
> >
> >I ran an X session on the FreeBSD laptop, then opened an Xterm and did
> >as an ordinary user:
> >[EMAIL PROTECTED] ssh -X [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> >I discovered the following:
> >1) From the Xterm that I initiated the X enabled ssh connection I
> >could "background" many applications and run them simultaneously. It
> >looked like this:
> >
> >[EMAIL PROTECTED] ssh -X [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >[EMAIL PROTECTED]'s password:
> >Last login: Mon Aug 29 18:27:23 2005 from mobile.silbsd.org
> >OpenBSD 3.6-stable (GENERIC) #5: Sat Jul  9 07:54:17 MDT 2005
> >
> >Welcome to OpenBSD: The proactively secure Unix-like operating system.
> >
> >Please use the sendbug(1) utility to report bugs in the system.
> >Before reporting a bug, please try to reproduce it with the latest
> >version of the code.  With bug reports, please try to ensure that
> >enough information to reproduce the problem is enclosed, and if a 
> >known fix for it exists, include that as well.
> >
> >$ gnumeric &
> >[1] 29884
> >$ /home/xfce/docs/spreadsheets/checking2005.gnumeric
> >
> >$ octave &
> >[2] 13200
> >$ jobs
> >[2] + Stopped (tty output) octave
> >[1] - Running              gnumeric
> >$ xterm -e octave &
> >[3] 18231
> >$ /home/xfce/docs/BSDCert/survey/SPREADSHT_ALL_MS2KXLS.gnumeric
> >/home/xfce/docs/BSDCert/survey/SPREADSHT_ALL_MS2KXLS.gnumeric
> >/home/xfce/docs/BSDCert/EnglishSurveyResults.xls
> >
> >[3] - Done                 xterm -e octave
> >$ 
> >
> >2) I found that if I opened a file manager I could click on the files
> >and they would open with the appropriate application.
> >
> >3) I opened two large Gnumeric spreadsheets and four instances of
> >Gimp. Each Gimp loaded a large digital camera picture. I found that
> >Gimp was pretty responsive when doing editing operations and zooming
> >the large digital jpegs.
> >
> >4) I then ran GMplayer from the server laptop and found that it would
> >play the movies but that they were in slow motion.
> >
> >5) I tried to drag n' drop from a GUI file manager on the server to
> >the same type of GUI file manager on the client but drag n' drop did
> >not work.
> >
> >6) I could copy and paste between applications on the client and
> >server. Actually I only tried tried this between two Vi editors. One
> >was on the client and one was on the server.
> >
> >I ran top on the client laptop (the FreeBSD one) and the memory
> >consumption was quite low:
> >last pid:   255;  load averages:  0.04,  0.08,  0.03    up 0+00:29:13 
> 20:44:39
> >44 processes:  1 running, 43 sleeping
> >CPU states:  0.0% user,  0.0% nice,  0.0% system,  0.5% interrupt, 99.5%
> idle
> >Mem: 28M Active, 13M Inact, 19M Wired, 24K Cache, 17M Buf, 92M Free
> >Swap: 304M Total, 304M Free
> >
> >  PID USERNAME PRI NICE  SIZE    RES STATE    TIME   WCPU    CPU COMMAND
> >  190 bsd        2   0 21024K 15204K select   0:19  1.42%  1.42% XFree86
> >  255 bsd       28   0  1996K  1220K RUN      0:00  2.69%  0.49% top
> >  220 bsd        2   0  2864K  2360K select   0:06  0.05%  0.05% ssh
> >  231 bsd        2   0  2844K  2304K select   0:06  0.00%  0.00% ssh
> >
> >
> >I think this method is viable alternative to projecting the entire
> >desktop from the server onto it's clients.
> >
> >
> >  
> >
> 
> -- 
> Ed Howland
> WDT Solutions, LLC.
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> (314) 962-0766
> 
>  
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> 


-- 
Kind regards,
Jonathan

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