If your not adverse to running some more commercial programs try SSH
Sentinal for windows, nice ipsec client works really well with freeswan.
I have setup
freeswan <-> freeswan
W2K <-> freeswan
XP <-> freeswan
plus with the NAT travesal patch.
The M$ solution is not a nice one especially if y
On Tue, 10 Jun 2003, Rene Cunningham wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 10, 2003 at 08:00:52PM +1000, Luke Burton wrote:
> > What I want is a VPN endpoint, running Linux, that can be connected to
> > with free clients for Windows NT/2000/XP and Mac OS X, and Linux as
> > well obviously.
> >
>
> Check out PP
One other thing...CIPE can also be easily used through/behind a firewall
Luke Burton wrote:
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People,
The cursory searching I have done on this topic has come up with little
of value. At least, any potential solutions that I've seen seem rather
convol
Try CIPE - Crypto IP Encapsulation
Websites:
LINUX: http://sites.inka.de/~bigred/devel/cipe.html
WinNT/2k/XP: http://cipe-win32.sourceforge.net/
Don't believe the blurb on win32 site re XP - it does work.
Howto's and other things that might help:
http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/mini/Cipe+Masq.html
http
Luke,
> Freeswan seems the obvious solution, but there is little docco to
> indicate how I configure it for maximum interoperability. Let alone
> interop with other free software.
>
> I also thought "isn't IPsec meant to be a standard?" Shouldn't I be
> able to use that?
>
> What do people reco
On Tue, Jun 10, 2003 at 08:00:52PM +1000, Luke Burton wrote:
> What I want is a VPN endpoint, running Linux, that can be connected to
> with free clients for Windows NT/2000/XP and Mac OS X, and Linux as
> well obviously.
>
Check out PPTP. It works well with Windows clients, though i havent com