On 2/3/2019 8:36 AM, David Sommerseth wrote:
On 01/02/2019 01:35, Daniel Miller via Openvpn-users wrote:
I may open a bug with Ubuntu (my server is on Bionic) but a recent re-boot
after some config changes may have exposed something. This isn't an OpenVPN
bug - rather known OpenVPN beh
I may open a bug with Ubuntu (my server is on Bionic) but a recent
re-boot after some config changes may have exposed something. This
isn't an OpenVPN bug - rather known OpenVPN behavior that may catch
others so I'm sharing.
Having installed packages quagga-ospfd & quagga-core I setup some ba
On 1/31/2019 1:01 AM, Jan Just Keijser wrote:
Hi,
it is probably easiest to run it on the tun0 interface, as you will
capture less non-relevant traffic.
Set up the tshark/tcpdump filter, then run a 'ping' from the OpenVPN
client to the server-side LAN GW straight after the connection has
been
On 1/29/2019 3:45 PM, Jan Just Keijser wrote:
Hi,
my answer seems to have gone AWOL. Here it is again:
I'm guessing this may be some of the magic of ICMP - but regardless
the fact that there's a delay before communication is established
tells me something isn't right. I'm fairly confident
On 1/16/2019 6:25 AM, Jan Just Keijser wrote:
Hi,
On 14/01/19 23:04, Daniel Miller via Openvpn-users wrote:
I have a configuration that probably should be listed in the
examples/FAQ - but I'm not seeing what I need.
In theory, what you are asking is definitely possible, with proper
ro
I have a configuration that probably should be listed in the
examples/FAQ - but I'm not seeing what I need.
OpenVPN server is running on a host in the corporate LAN. Using
TUN/Routed mode. VPN server has a LAN IP of 192.168.0.2 and a VPN IP of
10.0.0.1. This server also provides DNS & DHCP
Windows 8.1, OpenVPN 2.4 (GUI v11.9.0.0). Sometimes when connecting,
especially when re-connecting, my connections won't fully initialize.
However, it often seems that a manual "ipconfig /renew "
fixes it. So much so that I'm considering add a "up" command to my configs.
Does this indicate
I'm probably misunderstanding the purposes of things, but...
I have a Linux VPN server and a Windows client. I want the client to be
able to see at an "arp" level all the server-side LAN devices. At the
moment, I'm using a routed (tun) connection. The server LAN and the
client LAN are diffe
Slightly off-topic - but...
I've noticed that my "normal" or direct ssh connections from my home
(Windoze) to my office (Linux) can be subject to instability -
particularly if I simply leave PuTTY connected and idle for a while at
some point it will get disconnected. However...if I activate my
ead start
searching for server-side SSH key management options.
--
Daniel
On 12/1/2013 3:51 PM, Eric Crist wrote:
> SSH keys are not SSL certificates. They are completely different things.
>
>> On Dec 1, 2013, at 5:46 PM, Daniel Miller wrote:
>>
>> This seems like it s
This seems like it should be obvious - yet I'm obviously missing
something. I'm attempting to use the certs/keys generated by Easy-RSA
for Putty - but thus far every combination of PuttyGen and OpenSSL I've
tried to extract and work with the certs has been rejected by PuttyGen.
Is there in fac
Hello again.
Have a perfectly working setup - so now I want to mess with it. Maybe.
Routed VPN, Linux OpenVPN server, server-side Mikrotik router is
external to the VPN server. Clients connect and are able to access the
server - and the server-side network, as I have configured IP forwarding
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