Nevermind my above post.. i ask too many questions..! :)
But i think i have the wrong version of gufw. My version looks like this:
[IMG]http://imageshack.us/a/img21/9837/g6cl.jpg[/IMG]
my version is:9.10.2
But i cannot deny all outgoing traffic by default, only incomming,
In this thread, he
Thanks for the quick response..
I have been looking at this link here:
https://airvpn.org/topic/5586-prevent-leaks-with-linux-firestarter-also-stop-traffic-when-vpn-drops/#entry5642
and i will try to set it up.. even thou, getting a GUI on a headless server
proves challenging for someone who
Can it be this simple?
I am running openvpn on a system running Debian (squeeze) and connected to my
vpn service-provider. I have been looking everywhere to find a solution, that
can prevent leakage og my DNS and block all outgoing internet activity if the
connection to the VPN
And is UFW and GUFW linux programs?
Yes (and in Trisquel repos)
Nice instructions here...
https://airvpn.org/topic/5586-prevent-leaks-with-linux-firestarter-also-stop-traffic-when-vpn-drops/#entry5642
That sounds like exactly the kind of thing I want Liberty ;)
Just could do with a little help finding my OpenVPN servers network (the
10.x.y.z one)
Thanks for any help.
Your provider should be able to tell you the network class they use. Else you
can run ifconfig in a terminal when the tunnel is up. Look under tun+/inet
addr.
You are welcome.
Hmmm sussed it. IPV4 settings, Method Automatic (DHCP) addresses only, put
the DNS servers in then.
Turn off the connection and turn it on again!
Should have really watched an episode of the IT Crowd for the answer!
The most typical setup people want on a PC with OpenVPN is to:
1) Force ALL outgoing traffic to the OpenVPN server
2) Have the firewall block ALL outgoing traffic if the VPN suddenly breaks
(prevents leakage of your IP)
You can achieve this and prevent all leaks by installing UFW (and GUFW
Hi all
I recently got an openvpn service. I'd like to use the DNS provided by the
VPN rather than my ISP. The advice on the VPNs forun is to edit
/etc/resolv.conf but Trisquel says this file will be overwritten.
Any advice much appreciated.
Unfortunately I am not capable of answering your question.
However, your question actually made me think, if Trisquel overwrites files
concerning DNS, does that mean that when using Tor in Trisquel I could
actually be spied on? (My ISP knowing what websites I visit).
If someone could answer
Is your DNS leaking? Connect to your VPN then check here
http://www.dnsleaktest.com/ , if it shows your ISP's DNS then your in
trouble.
Yes that is the trouble ;) Any idea how to fix it?
That was a good suggestion f00bar. THANKS!
On 06/08/13 09:37, catfishagain wrote:
Hi all I recently got an openvpn service. I'd like to use the DNS
provided by the VPN rather than my ISP. The advice on the VPNs forun
is to edit /etc/resolv.conf but Trisquel says this file will be
overwritten. Any advice much appreciated.
I am not
This site has some good information on how to force and randomize the DNS
servers you want -
http://www.ab9il.net/crypto/
I personally prefer OpenNIC servers:
http://wiki.opennicproject.org/ClosestT2Servers
If you dont mind me asking who is the VPN provider? also are you connecting
through the network manager or command line? I had this problem before but
not with Trisquel!
The comment in /etc/resolv.conf says
# Dynamic resolv.conf(5) file for glibc resolver(3) generated by
resolvconf(8)
so the answer might be to uninstall resolvconf? Its manual page was not
particularly useful.
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