* Stuart Henderson [2021-10-26 11:35:06]:
> On 2021-10-26, Matt Dainty wrote:
> > I'm currently using OpenBSD with an Andrews & Arnold vDSL connection so I
> > have
> > a pppoe(4) interface, etc. and this works for IPv4 & IPv6.
> >
> > The pro
I'm currently using OpenBSD with an Andrews & Arnold vDSL connection so I have
a pppoe(4) interface, etc. and this works for IPv4 & IPv6.
The problem is because of the rubbish rural Openreach infrastructure here in
the UK I only get a stable 3.5 Mb/s, however another ISP (Voneus) has been
installi
* Patrick Wildt [2021-01-08 11:17:18]:
> Am Fri, Jan 08, 2021 at 02:29:02PM + schrieb Peter Kay:
> > There appear to be no 4G modem support at the moment, specifically a
> > mini PCI-e one so I can stick it in a PC engines apu4d4 and have a
> > backup connection.
> >
> > Presuming a driver wo
Hi,
The background to this question is this thread I raised in January:
http://marc.info/?t=12633023283&r=1&w=1
I didn't have chance to continue with it then, but I had a need to
revisit this recently so I dug up my notes again.
I'm not sure how much of RFC 3884 [1] is actually pertinent to
* Stuart Henderson [2010-01-12 17:02:39]:
> Their examples are using route-based VPNs (http://kb.juniper.net/KB4124,
> RFC3884), I'm not sure whether this is entirely possible here with our
> ipsec (policy-based), but you could try setting up tunnels between the
> gif tunnel endpoints i.e. 1.2.3.4
Hi,
I'm trying to evaluate using OpenBSD with Amazon's Virtual Private Cloud as a
"Customer Gateway" in their EC2-speak. What you need to do is create a tunnel
to each of Amazon's two routers, use BGP to exchange routes across the tunnels
and protect all the traffic with IPsec.
I've got it mostly
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