Basically I just wanted it for file sharing from my work to my home. 
and maybe remote desktop. I don't know much about ssh, and haven't 
heard of ssh tunneling.
It sounds like that may do the trick for me. I wanted my home computers 
(2 XP machines and an OS X) to show up in the network browser to bring 
in files if they're needed. I carry my iBook with me but cant have 
everything all the time.
  IP wouldn't be too much of a concern I've had the same address for 
close to a year now. I'm aware of the speed variations. But it that's 
not a big deal either.

Thanks
Thanks to everyone who replied.

Brian O'Neal



On Aug 16, 2004, at 5:29 PM, Lee Larson wrote:

> On Aug 16, 2004, at 12:21 PM, Brian wrote:
>
>> Does anyone know of a consumer grade(Cheap!) router that will allow 
>> me to make a vpn connection to my home from other locations?
>
> There's a linux project to do this called FreeS/WAN. If you can round 
> up an old 486 machine, all the software is then free. Check out 
> www.freeswan.org and 
> www.jacco2.dds.nl/networking/freeswan-panther.html.
>
>>  It seems that most everything that has "VPN Pass Through" is for 
>> outbound connections. Meaning from my home to my office. I want the 
>> reverse of this, from my office to my home.
>> Is anyone successfully getting from their office to their home 
>> networks with vpn? What is your set up, if so?
>>
>>  I have read, very little, about SSH. Is this similar to VPN? And if 
>> I understand correctly it is accomplished through the Terminal, 
>> correct?
>
> There are two different encryption standards here: IPSEC and SSH. 
> IPSEC is the one that's usually used for VPN, and SSH can really be 
> used for just about anything.
>
> You talk of setting up a VPN, but you don't say what services you want 
> to transfer between the networks. I don't have a VPN between my office 
> and home, but I can still do file sharing, printing and other services 
> securely in both directions via SSH tunneling. All the software you 
> need to do so is already there with Mac OS X.
>
> There are at least two annoyances with doing this over a cable 
> connection.
>
> First, the connection is not symmetrical; the downstream speed is LOTS 
> faster than the upstream speed. Depending on what you want to do, this 
> can get really bothersome.
>
> More minor is the fact that the IP address on the cable end is not 
> fixed. It doesn't change very often, but you can get around even that 
> by using a DynDNS service (www.dyndns.org is free) and suitable 
> software to readjust the DNS entry whenever the IP address changes. 
> Some of the cable/DSL routers (e.g., NetGear) even have the DynDNS 
> software built in. I use software on my Linux machine to keep the DNS 
> name up to date. The www.dyndns.org Web site has a list of software, 
> several of which work on Mac OS X. This way lml.homedns.org always 
> points to my house, no matter what games Insight plays with the IP 
> address.
>
> The last time the IP number changed was when the power went out for 
> four days a few weeks ago. This exceeded the lease time on the DHCP, 
> so a new IP was allocated when the power came on. I didn't even notice 
> that the number changed until a couple of days ago because the DynDNS 
> took care of addressing everything.
>
>
>
>
> | The next meeting of the Louisville Computer Society will
> | be August 24. The LCS Web page is <http://www.kymac.org>.
> | List posting address: <mailto:macgroup at erdos.math.louisville.edu>
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>



| The next meeting of the Louisville Computer Society will
| be August 24. The LCS Web page is <http://www.kymac.org>.
| List posting address: <mailto:macgroup at erdos.math.louisville.edu>
| List Web page: <http://erdos.math.louisville.edu/macgroup>


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