VPN
From Amahi Wiki
Remote access to your Amahi HDA comes pre-configured out of the box. There is nothing to configure in the server.
The VPN solution is implemented through the very popular OpenVPN software VPN.
Once connected from outside your network, your computer becomes virtually a computer in your home network. All your files and services are as easily accessible as when you are at home.
You need to forward one port in your router to enable the VPN.
Requirements
There are two requirements for Remote Access to work:
- On the client side, you need to be running an OpenVPN client. We provide one for Windows, preconfigured and we recommend one for the Mac, which requires some manual configuration, which are the same settings for the Linux client.
- Your router needs to forward UDP port 1194 to the IP address of the server. The way to do this is through port forwarding, which varies from router to router.
Clients For Windows, Mac and Linux
- Windows Client
- Mac: TunnelBlick (open source) or Viscosity (shareware)
- Linux (in general) and Ubuntu via GUI
Resources on Port Forwarding
- Massive database of port forwarding information by router
- YouTube Video on Port Forwarding for Linksys Routers: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GWPUdW1kIJA
Bridging VPN and eth0
if you'd like your VPN clients to get IP addresses in the same subnet as your HDA, and not in the 10.8.0.0/24 subnet (default), read this page: VPNBridge.
Troubleshooting
- Make sure your HDA's network IP range is different than that of the remote network. (e.g. if your HDA's IP address is 192.168.1.X, you cannot connect to it on a remote network also using 192.168.1.X)
- If you are running your HDA from a Verizon FiOS connection, you may experience strange disconnections. This may be due to the Actiontec router's small NAT table. Please see guides here http://www.verizonfioswiki.com/index.php/Using_Your_Own_Router for instructions on how to use your own router.
- If you have a Vonage V-Portal (or perhaps other voip adapters as well), plug your router into your modem, then the v-portal into your router. Vonage tells you to put the v-portal between the modem and the router, but I was unable to connect to vpn until I moved the adapter behind the router.