Hi all,

First, a whinge.

We’re using the NCP Secure Entry client for Mac.

As usual with these VPN clients, it’s diabolically bad. There’s a real feeling 
of “this was specced by someone who’s never going to use it and has never 
actually seen it” type of thing going on, that really gives you zero confidence 
in to the quality of the software underneath.

I’m pretty regularly having to kill the app and re-open it to either make it 
work, or to make any of my other networking work. Always a good sign.

They’ve come out with a version 4.0 recently, which supposedly has better 
compatibility with OS X 10.15. I’ve installed it.
In “take all the traffic” mode, it installs a couple of /1 routes so they 
longest prefix match instead of default. Fine.
In “split tunneling” mode, it *still* installs those /1 routes, but with a next 
hop of 0.0.0.1, so all of your non-VPN traffic is just dumped on the floor. 
Unlike split tunnelling mode, when you turn off the VPN connection, it leaves 
the broken routes in the table.

That’s the sort of bug that as someone who does some software dev, you can just 
picture the code that’s making that happen, and how it stinks of bad design. 
That’s not the sort of stuff I want running on my laptop with the privileges it 
requires to control routing and whatever else. That seems like a very poor 
choice.
Of course, I say “bug”. If it was well designed, this seems like a single bug. 
In the way this software seems to be designed, it’s more likely two.

The licensing model sucks, the whole thing. Disaster.



Anyway, whinge over.

What are my alternatives for a VPN client to talk to the SRX3XX?
I recall when they moved away from Pulse, there was this talk of “open 
standards” and other things. Supposedly there was going to be a bunch of 3rd 
party clients available. I haven’t been able to find any. Are there any?

--
Nathan Ward

_______________________________________________
juniper-nsp mailing list [email protected]
https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/juniper-nsp

Reply via email to