On 2014-07-28 08:43, John wrote:
On Sun, Jul 27, 2014 at 02:07:34PM -0400, Gordon Turner wrote:
On 2014-07-27 10:16, John wrote:
>On Sat, Jul 26, 2014 at 05:34:56PM -0400, Gordon Turner wrote:
>>On 2014-07-23 20:30, Gordon Turner wrote:
>
>Does your gateway at 192.168.2.1 know how to reach 10.0.
I suggested to re-configure your cable modem as a bridge,
so your OpenBSD-box gets public IP and not private (as you have it now).
On old days then I had a cable modem, I done exactly like this.
This WILL make your life easier. Trust me.
As you dont really have any control of OS(Linux) inside yo
On 2014-07-27 18:04, Stefan Sieg wrote:
On 27.07.2014 13:46, Gordon Turner wrote:
On 2014-07-27 08:06, Stefan Sieg wrote:
>On 26.07.2014 17:34, Gordon Turner wrote:
and you need a route to 10.0.0.0/24 for the hosts in your
192.168.2.0/24 network.
Without that route your hosts in your LAN have
On 2014-07-27 08:06, Stefan Sieg wrote:
On 26.07.2014 17:34, Gordon Turner wrote:
But any attempt to reach the 192.168.2.0/24 network fails.
did you set the route on your clients accordingly, so that they know
how to reach that network?
After connecting the VPN, I tried adding different rou
On 2014-07-23 20:30, Gordon Turner wrote:
Hey all,
Based on the feedback from Daniel and others, I have successfully
connected to my OpenBSD instance running behind my router / firewall
from an iOS and OSX client on the Internet. (Updated instructions
below.)
The one issue that I have is that
Hey all,
Based on the feedback from Daniel and others, I have successfully
connected to my OpenBSD instance running behind my router / firewall
from an iOS and OSX client on the Internet. (Updated instructions
below.)
The one issue that I have is that requests to the local private network
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