Hi all

I not a very expert on this area but My 0,02 cents 


For the radio setup ubiquiti have another set of frequencies 900mhz 3,6ghz  
6ghz. It's work to avoid a interference of common 2,4ghz and 5ghz and difficult 
a interception but not impossible.  Take a look if is found on your country.

You my try I radius setup for authentication 801.11x. + certificate 

http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/wireless/wireless-howto/30210-how-to-setting-up-freeradius-for-wpa-a-wpa2-enterprise-part-1



 

Em 26/06/2012, às 21:16, Jim Pingle <[email protected]> escreveu:

> On 6/26/2012 5:09 PM, Jim Thompson wrote:
>>>> 2. If I had a 2nd pfSense box in the sub-office, does pfSense have a way
>>>> to encrypt/secure the data travelling over the microwave link.   I'm
>>>> thinking something like a VPN - but not sure how to go about this when
>>>> I'm essentially trying to secure a patch lead.
>>> 
>>> It's essentially a network-to-network VPN - something like OpenVPN
>>> would be ideal here. 
>> 
>> OpenVPN: not ideal, but workable.   Requires making an IP interface out
>> of each end (as does IPSEC).  If Paul wants to bridge the connection,
>> neither will help.  If he wants to route between the two pfSense boxes,
>> either will work, through IPSec will offer greater throughput, and
>> Openvpn is typically easier to setup. 
> 
> You can bridge with either OpenVPN (in tap mode) or IPsec in transport
> mode + GIF tunnel. Neither of those work out of the box on 2.0.x though,
> both work fine on 2.1.
> 
> You still have to be careful to avoid a mess of conflicting IPs, and of
> course overloading the bridge with broadcast/multicast, but it can be done.
> 
> Jim
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