Campagnol is a distributed IP-based VPN program able to open new connections through NATs or firewalls without any configuration. It uses UDP for the transport layer, and utilizes tunneling and encryption (with DTLS) and the UDP hole punching NAT traversal technique. The established connections are P2P.
Hi.
Yesterday I installed Solaris 11.3 and I tried to setup a VPN but I didn't find how to make it.
I saw the "network manager" where I found the ethernet connection but I didn't find where to add a VPN connection.
When I used Debian Linux there was NetworkManagerVPN that with a GUI I... (0 Replies)
Hi,
I want to work on a remote unix server, then on a windows XP station I have a Forticlient that makes a VPN to the network on which the server is situated. But then I do not know how to work with. In DOS box (cmd BOX) I issue:
telnet myserver
but It does not know IT.
Any idea ?
Many thanks. (2 Replies)
We have an older model DG Aviion Unix system and we're trying to switch to VPN but we can't talk to the Unix box... can't ping or telnet to it, but we can talk to all our other systems (PC/NT servers).
Is there a network/tcpip setting we're missing? Something we have to change/set, either on... (0 Replies)
CAPISTRANO(1) General Commands Manual CAPISTRANO(1)NAME
cap -- cap is an utlity to invoke capistrano tasks.
SYNOPSIS
cap <command> [options]
DESCRIPTION
Capistrano is a utility and framework for executing commands in parallel on multiple remote machines, via SSH. It uses a simple DSL (bor-
rowed in part from Rake, http://rake.rubyforge.org/) that allows you to define _tasks_, which may be applied to machines in certain roles.
It also supports tunneling connections via some gateway machine to allow operations to be performed behind VPN's and firewalls.
Capistrano was originally designed to simplify and automate deployment of web applications to distributed environments, and originally came
bundled with a set of tasks designed for deploying Rails applications. The deployment tasks are now (as of Capistrano 2.0) opt-in and
require clients to explicitly put "load 'deploy'" in their recipes.
Capistrano is a self-documenting program by giving you an extensive help listing for each command. If you think that this manual page is
outdated, simply running
cap -h
ASSUMPTIONS
Capistrano is "opinionated software", which means it has very firm ideas about how things ought to be done, and tries to force those ideas
on you. Some of the assumptions behind these opinions are:
* You are using SSH to access the remote servers.
* You either have the same password to all target machines, or you have public keys in place to allow passwordless access to them.
Do not expect these assumptions to change.
OPTIONS
Capistrano is extensible configurable, and it has the following configuration options:
-e--explain TAKS
Displays help (if available) for the task.
-F--default-config
Always use default config, even with -f.
-f--file FILE
A recipe file to load. May be given more than once.
-H--long-help
Explain these options.
-h--help
Display this help message.
-p--password
Immediately prompt for the password.
-q--quiet
Make the output as quiet as possible.
-S--set-before NAME=VALUE
Set a variable before the recipes are loaded.
-s--set NAME=VALUE
Set a variable after the recipes are loaded.
-T--taks
List all tasks in the loaded recipe files.
-V--version
Display the Capistrano version, and exit.
-v--verbose
Be more verbose. May be given more than once.
-X--skip-system-config
Don't load the system config file (capistrano.conf)
-x--skip-user-config
Don't load the user config file (.caprc)
SEE ALSO
capify (1).
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Leandro Nunes dos Santos leandronunes@colivre.coop.br for the Debian system (but may be used by others).
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU General Public License, Version 2 any
later version published by the Free Software Foundation.
On Debian systems, the complete text of the GNU General Public License can be found in /usr/share/common-licenses/GPL.
CAPISTRANO(1)