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VPN setup
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VPN setup

Im looking to setup a private vpn.

I would like to here any tips on what linux to use ,machine requirements and providers you like.

Comments

  • Do you have any existing experience with Linux?

  • I have used Debian,Ubuntu, and Centos

  • OpenVPN or SoftEther VPN.

  • Debian 32-bit with OpenVPN. If it's just you using it, you could probably get away with using a 32 MB of RAM machine.

  • I found OpenVPN the easiest to set up.

  • @JustAMacUser said:
    Debian 32-bit with OpenVPN. If it's just you using it, you could probably get away with using a 32 MB of RAM machine.

    1 connection?

  • if it's something you want to be able to pierce through firewalls or get something custom, i'd say softether (i use it...)... just don't use securenat...

  • GoodHostingGoodHosting Member
    edited August 2014

    @Chuck said:
    1 connection?

    Our OpenVPN-scrap appliance (meant for one time use) for internal networks runs on 32 MB of RAM and is a minimal installation of ArchLinux (manually installed of course.) No swap, no var, no logs; single user created for a single connection, auto-destroy after use.

    It only uses about 20M of RAM, and that's only if you turn on compression.

    Shorewall is what takes up most of the RAM.

    Thanked by 1Chuck
  • @GoodHosting said:
    Shorewall is what takes up most of the RAM.

    If you released that, I bet it would be incredibly useful for people who need just a temporary VPN.

  • @0xdragon said:
    If you released that, I bet it would be incredibly useful for people who need just a temporary VPN.

    We're looking into starting our own TDN actually, for KVM; both Xens, and OpenVZ (when extracted into a Ploop container, for the few appliances that don't require kernel support; like nginx, MMM, etcetera.)

  • @Chuck said:
    1 connection?

    Debian 7 32-bit on OpenVZ, yeah; it runs pretty light. (Not that it matters, a lot of good providers here have 128 MB systems that are pretty affordable. Definitely can do a lot with that.)

  • I had a debian server that ran in 10mb memory so that sounds like the distro I'll use then.
    I was mainly setting up so could use with phone over public wifi.
    i seen alienvps has a 19.00 a year vps . I might try that.

  • @IronRook said:
    I had a debian server that ran in 10mb memory so that sounds like the distro I'll use then.
    I was mainly setting up so could use with phone over public wifi.
    i seen alienvps has a 19.00 a year vps . I might try that.

    I'd be careful with alienVPS, had a friend who used one of their VPS plans, long story short i bet him it wouldnt be stable so i chucked it up on a pingdom and within one month uptime was 97%, 149 outages and each outage was 3-9 minutes.

    You'd probably be better off grabbing a openVZ ramnode plan($15 yr 128MB)

    on another note i've used Debian + softether and that plus a Teamspeak 3 server and usage was usally 60-70MB.

  • @Rhys_quadex said:
    You'd probably be better off grabbing a openVZ ramnode plan($15 yr 128MB)

    +1 for RamNode. I'm using one their 128 MB OpenVZ SSD instances for OpenVPN and it runs awesome.

  • Surprised nobody has mentioned Wable. Personally havent used them but many here give them good reviews. 75cents a month for 1TB.
    https://www.wable.com

  • Just get a LES for $4 a year. Not sure how easy to set up SoftEther with NAT?

  • @Chuck said:
    Just get a LES for $4 a year. Not sure how easy to set up SoftEther with NAT?

    really easy, just install SE, create dhcp server & add a network device and bam done!

  • @kuzko said:

    really easy, just install SE, create dhcp server & add a network device and bam done!

    SecureNAT is easy. I can't get NAT IPv4 to work in Local Bridge.

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