Am 03.04.2018 um 10:26 schrieb Andrei Borzenkov:
On Tue, Apr 3, 2018 at 11:02 AM, Frank Krüger <fkrueger@mailbox.org> wrote:
Am 03.04.2018 um 09:48 schrieb Andrei Borzenkov:
On Tue, Apr 3, 2018 at 10:38 AM, Frank Krüger <fkrueger@mailbox.org> wrote:
Am 03.04.2018 um 09:20 schrieb Frederic Crozat:
Le samedi 31 mars 2018 à 13:20 +0200, Dominique Leuenberger / DimStar a écrit :
* vpnc and networkmanager-vpnc will be removed from the distro: openvpn supports those use cases now.
I think there was a typo in the mail.
openCONNECT is replacing vpnc, not openVPN.
And AFAIK, openconnect (http://www.infradead.org/openconnect/ ) does everything vpnc does, even better.
For everybody who commented in the thread, please test with openconnect / NM-openconnect
Thank you for the clarification. I removed vpnc and switched to openconnect. Using the VPN protocol Cisco AnyConnect it works pretty well. However, it is not clear to me how to deal with VPN connections that explicitly require IPSecID and IPSecsecret.
Can you connect to those servers with Cisco AnyConnect? If yes, you should be able to migrate to openconnet using similar settings.
Yes, I can.
Mmm ... AnyConnect actually supports both SSL and IPSec protocols, so indeed depending on your server setup (which can selectively enable both SSL and IPSec) it may force you to use IPSec. Just to be sure
- you can connect using Cisco AnyConnectYes.
- you cannot connect using openconnect Just tried, openconnect works for me as well.
- you can connect usin vpnc Yes.
To sum up, replacing vpnc by openconnect (and the corresponding NM packages) works for me. However, the question still remains what happens to users who have to rely on IPSec VPN. Regards, Frank -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org