OpenVPN is a piece of software dedicated to creating virtual private networks. Its setup involves creating virtual network interfaces on the VPN server and on the client(s); both tun (for IP-level tunnels) and tap (for Ethernet-level tunnels) interfaces are supported. In practice, tun interfaces will most often be used except when the VPN clients are meant to be integrated into the server's
For this, you need to have an active internet connection and an Ivacy VPN account. If you have not subscribed for Ivacy VPN account, click here to subscribe now. This tutorial is based on command line setup on Debian Linux. Let’s start. On the command line, type the following command, to #install PPTP software apt-get install pptp-linux Linux configure point to point tunneling PPTP VPN client Jun 11, 2007 How to: Install and Configure PPTP VPN on a cPanel server Sep 29, 2011 VPN-client - Debian Wiki network-manager-pptp-gnome: Network management framework (PPTP plugin GNOME GUI) network-manager-vpnc-gnome: This package provides the GNOME bits of NetworkManager's VPNC plugin. pptp-linux: Client for the proprietary Microsoft Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol, PPTP
Sep 29, 2011
debian - PPTP VPN not working with Linux router - Unix @Jez yeah, they are ip_nat_pptp is an alias for nf_nat_pptp. I should probably use the non-alias in the answer for clarity, but they'll both work just fine. – derobert Apr 12 '16 at 18:01 Although I loaded the ip_nat_pptp module, still I am not able to connect to the remote VPN server.
How to build your own PPTP VPN server on Ubuntu, CentOS
Nov 27, 2011