Actually I've been reading up on the FEAT OpenVPN client from the Android market, it doesn't require root. FEAT VPN leverages Android's built-in L2TP VPN client to simulate a TUN device for the OpenVPN client. I'm rooted and one thing I noticed was it doesn't work if you have reverse path filtering enabled. I'm getting close! I'll report back later, a lot of my problems have to do with the ROM I'm running I believe.
-- Michael D. Wood ITSecurityPros.org www.itsecuritypros.org -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Stefan Baur Sent: Saturday, September 08, 2012 6:12 AM To: pfSense support and discussion Subject: Re: [pfSense] Android VPN with pfSense Am 08.09.2012 10:16, schrieb Paul Gear: >> I'll leave others to discuss the relative security merits of each >> (but yes, L2TP by itself will not encrypt). [...] > If you have a PPTP VPN, you should read > http://isc.sans.edu/diary/End+of+Days+for+MS-CHAPv2/13807 > > I'm working on a plan to eradicate all PPTP from our network. Thanks, that was what I had heard of. So, from the four options I have (Being stuck on Android 2.2.1 and unable to root), the first two are out. - PPTP-VPN - hacked - L2TP-VPN - unencrypted - L2TP/IPSec PSK-VPN - L2TP/IPSec CRT-VPN What about the last two options, are they possible with pfSense 2.0.1-RELEASE, and if so, is there a howto available? -Stefan _______________________________________________ List mailing list [email protected] http://lists.pfsense.org/mailman/listinfo/list
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