Thanks, this is exactly what I wanted to know. Kind regards, André. https://rodier.me/
25 Nov 2019 08:01:10 Martin <[email protected]>: > Hi Andrê, > So by nodes I assume you mean the "boxes".I would suggest each "box" gets > it's own tinc node(with a static ip) and then on the server it should be a > matter of pointing at the ip address of the appropriate box tinc ip address. > I've done this myself with WireGuard and it works great. > > On Mon, Nov 25, 2019 at 7:14 AM André Rodier > <[email protected][mailto:[email protected]]> wrote: > >> Hello, >> >> I need to build a VPN, and I am not sure if tinc is the right tool to >> use. I am more familiar with OpenVPN. >> >> I have a few boxes at home, behind a router with a dynamic IP >> address. Those boxes host some services, like web sites, for instance. >> >> I have a server hosted online, with a few IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. All >> addresses being static, of course. >> >> I am planning to use tinc on Debian, to "expose" the services hosted on >> these "home" boxes on IPv4/IPv6 addresses, using tinc VPN. The NAT >> would occur in the tunnel. I can write the nat/masquerade rules. >> >> The big question is, does tinc need the two nodes have a static IP >> address ? >> >> I don't want to modify the router configuration or to create nat rules >> in the home router. >> >> Thanks, >> André >> >> _______________________________________________ >> tinc mailing list >> [email protected][mailto:[email protected]] >> >> https://www.tinc-vpn.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tinc[https://www.tinc-vpn.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tinc] >> > _______________________________________________ tinc mailing list [email protected] https://www.tinc-vpn.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tinc
