OpenVPN

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Revision as of 04:58, 28 March 2013 by Apos (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Introduciton == After successfully played around with an Cisco ASA 5505 Firewall we liked to expand our VPN experience. I personally was a little disappointed about the so...")
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Introduciton

After successfully played around with an Cisco ASA 5505 Firewall we liked to expand our VPN experience. I personally was a little disappointed about the solutions, Cisco offered to us. First of all, I was very disappointed finding out, that - for IPSec VPN - there doesn't exist an native 64bit client for my linux machine. Second the license fees for SSL VPN are barely legal. Third the license and configuration djungle Cisco offers is not what I like.

To make a long story short: pFsense has everything we needed, was configured in a snap and in combination with a Soekris hardware ist a really robust, fast and easy to maintain appliance. ooking back spending hours and hours configuring the ASA, dangling around with license issues and limitationsone of the software this was one of the best decisions this year!

pFSense

There are a lot of HowTo's and Tutorials how to get OpenVPN running with pfSense. I don't like to add another 2 cents here.

OpenVPN auto reconnect

Despite the very stable connection overall - if you are on the road and the internet connection is lost, the network manager of Ubuntu does not reconnect when internet is available again. On ubuntuforum I found a python script which uses the native network manager settings to reconnect a broken vpn: