Subject: Re: Tunneling question.
To: None <netbsd-users@netbsd.org>
From: Mattias Karlsson <mattias.karlsson@nocom.se>
List: netbsd-users
Date: 07/25/2002 13:54:04
Oh, right... D is just ppp0 of B if someone didn't get that.

And D WAS accessable from the workstation at the bottom of the drawing.
(192.168.1.x)


Regards,
Mattias.


Mattias Karlsson wrote:
 > Okay, so I made a cute little drawing:
 >
 > http://keihan.sergei.cc/pictures/net-setup.jpg
 >
 > What I want is D mapping to A via B (correct?), performance is not
 > important. Availability is important tho. I tried to setup vtun
 > yesterday, made it work a bit... Problem was that only B (vtund -s)
 > made it to D (A), that worked great tho!. I want all boxes behind B to
 > have access, and the whole Internet too... :)
 >
 > What is local and what is remote when setting up IPs in the vtun ppp
 > section on the server-side?
 >
 > If someone didn't understand this, I want to have access to A (D) from
 > work and from other places (I want D to have a public IP)...
 >
 >
 > Let me know if you want my vtund.conf too...
 >
 >
 > Best regards,
 > Mattias.
 >
 >
 > Manuel Bouyer wrote:
 >
 >> On Wed, Jul 24, 2002 at 10:25:29AM -0700, Andrew Gillham wrote:
 >>
 >>> I have used vtun, and it works pretty well.  You have to keep in 
mind it
 >>> has the performance issues of running in userland, but on a fast
 >>> machine it
 >>> is not really an issue. (unless you're tunneling over a high-speed 
link)
 >>
 >>
 >>
 >> Does it use tcp or udp for tunneling ?
 >>
 >