Date: Mon, 29 May 2000 01:26:07 -0500 From: Glenn Johnson <glennpj@bayouhome.net> To: Chris Fedde <chris@fedde.littleton.co.us> Cc: Glenn Johnson <glennpj@bayouhome.net>, questions@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: setting up a VPN Message-ID: <20000529012607.A44015@gforce.johnson.home> In-Reply-To: <200005290449.e4T4nLv00779@fedde.littleton.co.us>; from chris@fedde.littleton.co.us on Sun, May 28, 2000 at 10:49:21PM -0600 References: <20000528213746.A622@gforce.johnson.home> <200005290449.e4T4nLv00779@fedde.littleton.co.us>
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On Sun, May 28, 2000 at 10:49:21PM -0600, Chris Fedde wrote: > It seems that you are on the right track. There are a couple things > to think about with these configs though. First are you going to be > stepping on corporate security's toes when you do this? Second can > you ping the target machine at work? > > The big issue is establishing any kind of connection between the work > and home machines. Once that is done then it is reasonably simple to > get the rest of it going. > > A technique that I have used is to establish an ssh session between > two systems. Then bind the socket on both ends using ppp(1)'s > tunneling capability. I can do an ssh session. How do I bind the socket on both ends? -- Glenn Johnson glennpj@bayouhome.net To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
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