Difference between revisions of "VPN Ubuntu"
(An explanation of how to use Ubuntu's graphical user interface (GUI) to get a VPN connection to an Amahi server.) |
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==Step #1: Install the OpenVPN Application== | ==Step #1: Install the OpenVPN Application== | ||
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+ | Although you don't have to understand much about OpenVPN, the FOSS ('''F'''ree '''O'''pen '''S'''ource '''S'''oftware) program Amahi uses for secure connections from outside your Amahi HDA ('''H'''ome '''D'''igital '''A'''ssistant, the Amahi server you've set up), you do have to have the OpenVPN software installed on your Linux machine. In the case of Ubuntu 9.10 (and 9.04), this isn't installed by default, but, like most Linux '''distros''' (short for ''distributions,'' the “flavor” of Linux you've chosen), this is relatively straightforward and easy. |
Revision as of 23:08, 24 October 2009
Setting Up OpenVPN for Amahi Server Under Ubuntu 9.10
Not everyone feels comfortable working from the Linux CLI (Command Line Interface), and so the alternate set-up instructions for connecting to Amahi's OpenVPN service might seem a bit intimidating to some. Here is a step-by-step tutorial explaining how to get VPN (Virtual Private Networking) running under a GUI (Graphical User Interface) in Ubuntu 9.10, a distribution of Linux.
Step #1: Install the OpenVPN Application
Although you don't have to understand much about OpenVPN, the FOSS (Free Open Source Software) program Amahi uses for secure connections from outside your Amahi HDA (Home Digital Assistant, the Amahi server you've set up), you do have to have the OpenVPN software installed on your Linux machine. In the case of Ubuntu 9.10 (and 9.04), this isn't installed by default, but, like most Linux distros (short for distributions, the “flavor” of Linux you've chosen), this is relatively straightforward and easy.