>On Wednesday, January 24th, 2024 at 11:18 AM, Marc SCHAEFER ><schae...@alphanet.ch> wrote:
> Hello, > > On Wed, Jan 24, 2024 at 06:14:22AM +0000, Peter Davis via Openvpn-users wrote: > > > 1- I don't understand what you mean about "server 20.20.0.0 255.255.255.0". > > What is the difference between IP range 10.X and 20.X? > > > 10.0.0.0/8 is a private range, that you can use as you please for private > networks, including 10.0.0.0/24. > 20.20.0.0/24 is: > > schaefer@reliant:~$ whois 20.20.0.0 > > NetRange: 20.0.0.0 - 20.31.255.255 > CIDR: 20.0.0.0/11 > NetName: MSFT > NetHandle: NET-20-0-0-0-1 > Parent: NET20 (NET-20-0-0-0-0) > NetType: Direct Allocation > OriginAS: > Organization: Microsoft Corporation (MSFT) > RegDate: 2017-10-18 > Updated: 2021-12-14 > Ref: https://rdap.arin.net/registry/ip/20.0.0.0 > > OrgName: Microsoft Corporation > OrgId: MSFT > Address: One Microsoft Way > [ ... ] > > This will work, as long as you have a NAT between those addresses and > Internet, > and obviously you won't be able to contact any of those Microsoft IPs anymore, > > In short: bad idea. Use private ranges only (or any public range that you > own). > > > 2- But this is a remote server, not an internal server, and I want to > > connect to this server through OpenVPN, but my connection looks like HTTPS. > > > Parse error. Hello, Thanks. I am testing this scenario in a virtual environment before moving it to the real world. For this reason, my server has two NICs. One that is directly connected to the Internet (enp0s3) and the other to the internal network (enp0s8). What is problem? How can I make OpenVPN look like an HTTPS connection? _______________________________________________ Openvpn-users mailing list Openvpn-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/openvpn-users