Sent from my iPhone
On Jun 8, 2012, at 5:16 PM, "Jim Fuller - N7VR" n7vr@n7vr.org wrote:
(Please trim inclusions from previous messages) _______________________________________________ Hi Ralph,
Just a few of questions? How are you going to control the content of the traffic to meet the Amateur Radio Rules and Regulations from the various countries on the Internet traffic to radio via your Internet Service Provider business? How are you going to preserve the AX.25a packets currently required under ITU rules? How are you going to work with those who are required to have a tunnel system? There are many countries that do not allow various content form or to the Internet by radio networks. There must be a control or gateway. This is not a US issue or community, It is a world group.
Also, could you please add at least your call sign to your posts? I am not sure which Ralph is speaking.
Jim Fuller N7VR -- http://www.n7vr.org International TCP/IP Gateways Robot Operator -- http://www.ampr-gateways.org
MTAPRS NET Server Operator -- http://www.mtaprs.net CWOP-2 -- http://www.wxqa.com IRLP Node 3398 - http://irlp.fuller.net Original ARECC contributor
-----Original Message----- From: Ralph [mailto:ralphlists@bsrg.org] Sent: Thursday, June 07, 2012 6:26 PM To: 'AMPRNet working group' Subject: Re: [44net] OpenVPN
(Please trim inclusions from previous messages) _______________________________________________ We don't want a tunnel. We want them sent through our Tier 1 upstream provider to our ISP, which I own and provide service to other Hams on. That is why we contacted you in the first place Brian.
44 Net is not just for tunneling Use the allocation or lose it, just like 220 (tm)
-----Original Message-----
the mention of using openvpn was mostly intended as a nudge. While IPIP seems to be the defacto standard for amprnet tunneling, it's about the only place I've seen it used much. The tools for tunnels/vpn links are out there but something such as openvpn is much more widely supported than ipip....
As a historical note, we used IPIP tunnels because that's all there was when we got started. This was early; we were using tunnels even before a protocol ID byte value had been assigned to IPIP. VPNs hadn't been invented yet.
Indeed, we've discussed using openvpn before and the response was generally favorable. It would be a great step forward for the tunneled parts of the network.
- Brian
te: 06/07/12
44Net mailing list 44Net@hamradio.ucsd.edu http://hamradio.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/44net
44Net mailing list 44Net@hamradio.ucsd.edu http://hamradio.ucsd.edu/mailman/listinfo/44net