From 8dd0350e1607aa30f7a043c8d5ec7a7eeb874115 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Alberto Gonzalez Iniesta Date: Mon, 5 Nov 2012 16:28:09 +0100 Subject: Imported Upstream version 2.3_rc1 --- sample/sample-config-files/static-home.conf | 72 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 72 insertions(+) create mode 100644 sample/sample-config-files/static-home.conf (limited to 'sample/sample-config-files/static-home.conf') diff --git a/sample/sample-config-files/static-home.conf b/sample/sample-config-files/static-home.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c966687 --- /dev/null +++ b/sample/sample-config-files/static-home.conf @@ -0,0 +1,72 @@ +# +# Sample OpenVPN configuration file for +# home using a pre-shared static key. +# +# '#' or ';' may be used to delimit comments. + +# Use a dynamic tun device. +# For Linux 2.2 or non-Linux OSes, +# you may want to use an explicit +# unit number such as "tun1". +# OpenVPN also supports virtual +# ethernet "tap" devices. +dev tun + +# Our OpenVPN peer is the office gateway. +remote 1.2.3.4 + +# 10.1.0.2 is our local VPN endpoint (home). +# 10.1.0.1 is our remote VPN endpoint (office). +ifconfig 10.1.0.2 10.1.0.1 + +# Our up script will establish routes +# once the VPN is alive. +up ./home.up + +# Our pre-shared static key +secret static.key + +# OpenVPN 2.0 uses UDP port 1194 by default +# (official port assignment by iana.org 11/04). +# OpenVPN 1.x uses UDP port 5000 by default. +# Each OpenVPN tunnel must use +# a different port number. +# lport or rport can be used +# to denote different ports +# for local and remote. +; port 1194 + +# Downgrade UID and GID to +# "nobody" after initialization +# for extra security. +; user nobody +; group nobody + +# If you built OpenVPN with +# LZO compression, uncomment +# out the following line. +; comp-lzo + +# Send a UDP ping to remote once +# every 15 seconds to keep +# stateful firewall connection +# alive. Uncomment this +# out if you are using a stateful +# firewall. +; ping 15 + +# Uncomment this section for a more reliable detection when a system +# loses its connection. For example, dial-ups or laptops that +# travel to other locations. +; ping 15 +; ping-restart 45 +; ping-timer-rem +; persist-tun +; persist-key + +# Verbosity level. +# 0 -- quiet except for fatal errors. +# 1 -- mostly quiet, but display non-fatal network errors. +# 3 -- medium output, good for normal operation. +# 9 -- verbose, good for troubleshooting +verb 3 -- cgit v1.2.3