Clayton a écrit :
When you connect with VPN, all of your network traffic is routed to the server you are connected to. I don't want that - I run BitTorrent, a personal webserver and so on, and that network traffic should never be routed through my employer's severs. The easy solution to this is to use VirtualBox and install a guest OS. I have openSUSE 11.0 running as a guest OS, and I use that guest OS to VPN to my employer. This way, all network traffic from the guest OS is set to my employer via the VPN, and all network traffic from my host OS stays where it should be, going through my private ISP. VirtualBox allows me to easily isolate my working environment from my personal environment.
I think is this situation virtual box is an overkill (I use it often, but for other purposes) if virtual box can route to the vpn without you host being also on this vpn, this mean you can do it yourself also... this mean you probably have to setup a second interface on top of the first, for example eth0:1 and eth0 and route eth0:1 to your vpn. jdd -- Jean-Daniel Dodin Président du CULTe www.culte.org -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org