epoch1970;653689 Wrote: > Perhaps your router on the SB3 end can run openvpn ? > In this case, set it up as an openvpn "client", and have it try connect > continuously to somesuch.dyndns.com (the PC or the router at home) > On the PC or router at home run both openvpn and dyndns DNS daemon to > refresh the IP pointer to somesuch.dyndns.com. > On the openvpn "server" instance use bridged mode to extend your home > network to the remote router and SB3. Player/server discovery will > work, playing FLAC files without rebuffering will probably be a bit > difficult, but everything else should work perfect. DHCP too if this is > what your SB3 uses. > On both sides use certificates to identify both ends and allow > connection. You may want to use a cipher for the tunnel (which will > hammer the router a bit) but if you don't the effect is that someone > listening on the connection will be able to read the data stream. In > this specific case I don't see this is an issue. Handshake always stays > secure by use of certificate/private key. > Openvpn is an ssl VPN, it is very robust and resilent to NAT. > > I guess you can do about the same using ssh, certificates, map ports > and somehow use a daemon on the router to reconnect. But all this looks > so much like openvpnĀ
How nice of you to be so specific and instructional ! -- pski real stereo doesn't just wake the neighbors, it -enrages- them.. It is truly the Golden Age of Wireless ------------------------------------------------------------------------ pski's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=15574 View this thread: http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?t=89919
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