![]() In the Window that opens click “Next”, then select “Install the hardware that I manually select from a list (Advanced)”, click “Next” again, select “Network Adapters” and click “Next”, select something that looks like “TAP-* Provider V9” from the “Manufacturer list” (there’s probably going to be the name of your VPN provider where the star is). Sudo cat>/lib/systemd/system/rvice /lib/systemd/system/ /usr/ local/etc/tinc/%VPNNAME%/tinc-up /usr/ local/etc/tinc/VPNNAME/tinc-down “Add Legacy Hardware”. to do this you can run the following commands - 1 If you use systemd (which would be the case with most Linux distributions), it can be handy to set up a systemd service to easily manage tinc VPNs. If you use iptables, the command is sudo iptables -I INPUT -p udp -dport 655 -m state -state NEW -j ACCEPT SystemD service With ufw this can be done with sudo ufw allow 655/udp. ![]() You do not need to do this on machines that will only connect to the network and nothing else but won’t be used as a gateway by other peers. On machines you want peers to connect to when trying to connect to the network you will need to open udp port 655. ![]() For the rest of the machines the process is summarised in the appropriate section. For setup on the initial machine, just continue reading. Calling it ‘the server’ would be incorrect though, because with Tinc any node can accept connections and advertise systems connected to it to the whole network. The setup for the first machine is slightly different than the others.
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