On Fri, 2017-01-27 at 23:55 +0000, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> On Fri, 2017-01-27 at 14:53 -0800, Mike Wright wrote:
> > On 01/27/2017 02:36 PM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> > > I have a subscription to a commercial VPN provider and would like to
> > > configure certain applications to always use VPN connections as far as
> > > the provider while everything else goes through as normal. Note that
> > > this needs to work for arbitrary remote sites so the VPN is basically
> > > acting as a proxy rather than me controlling both ends of the
> > > connection, so e.g. an SSH tunnel won't do it.
> > > 
> > > I looked into this a while ago and there are several suggestions on the
> > > Web as to how to do this on Linux, but those I tried didn't work for
> > > me. At least one idea seemed to involve setting up an alternate network
> > > name space with its own routing, but it's been a while and I'm afraid I
> > > didn't take note of the details.
> > 
> > Hi Patrick,
> > 
> > Stéphane Graber of Ubuntu's LXC/D container world has done several 
> > things with VPN from passing the vpn to a container where the container 
> > sees it as just another eth device, to managing his sundry VPN 
> > connections via namespacing.
> > 
> > His words:
> > 
> > """
> > The code is available at: git clone 
> > git://github.com/stgraber/vpn-container.  Then it’s as simple as: 
> > ./start-vpn VPN-NAME CONFIG
> > """
> > 
> > The approach is discussed at https://www.stgraber.org/category/lxc/. 
> > Search for VPN in containers for the specific section.
> 
> Thanks. The versions I'd seen before didn't involve containers but I'll
> take a look.

Decided to try this, but there's a dependency on something called
uidmap which doesn't seem to exist for Fedora (according to both dnf
search and Google).

Other ideas are welcome.

poc
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