On Fri, Aug 03, 2007 at 02:10:42PM +0200, Julien lecubin wrote:
> Hi list,
> 
> I have installed in my office an SRSS4U2 on a 2 V210 - solaris 10
> The SunRay infrastructure in my corporate LAN is working like a charm
> I'm now interested in testing a [EMAIL PROTECTED] accessing my sunray servers 
> via an OpenVPN service running at work
> I know there is a [EMAIL PROTECTED] solution using a linksys - Firmware 
> DD-WRT 
> running as an openvpn client 
> (http://wiki.c0t0d0s0.org/index.php/SunRay_ueber_WAN-Strecken)
> but with a sunray 2FS built-in vpn client is it possible to directly 
> connect it from home to my openvpn service at work ?

No, not yet; SunRay supports only IPSEC, unfortunately.

I second a request for OpenVPN in SunRay FW. (I'm just airing the idea
on this list; I know a real request should go through other channels)...

My view on this is, that OpenVPN is basically IPSEC done right. It
tunnels IP through UDP with all of the benefits of using a standard
protocol and none of the downsides or complexity of IPSEC AH/EH.

OpenVPN supports pre-shared keys or certificates, just like IPSEC.

It works through NAT, unlike basic IPSEC.

It is simple and rock-solid, very much unlike IPSEC.

It works well on Linux, Solaris and Windows. I run it in production on
all environments with many different versions of the implementation all
working seamlessly together (only possible exception would be some DNS
resolution order screwup which according to Microsoft knowledge-base is
inherent in Windows and hardly the fault of OpenVPN).

-- 

 / jakob

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