DaPlumber
Patron
- Joined
- May 21, 2014
- Messages
- 246
Hehe, nice chart. Linux really doesn't belong in that chart though as Linux is NOT a part of UNIX family. It IS a clone of UNIX based on Minix, which conforms to the POSIX standards, but as even your chart clearly shows, there is no line whatsoever connecting the UNIX tree to the Linux tree. UNIX is mostly closed source (outside of BSD) while Linux is completely open source.
Eh, No. :D Linux started out as a Comp-Sci project as a "work-alike" for a UNIX-style kernel. We could debate the various parts of an OS and also kernel and user land compared with GNU and HURD, yada, yada. But let's not.
Not necessarily; In fact, if you have one of those DD-WRT/Tomato compatible routers, you could just flash it with the latest available ROM and it provides a very elegant and easy to use web GUI interface to set the server up.
It will set up the server, routing/bridging, and all the general heavy-lifting for you.
You may have to create the certs in a CLI, but that's just as easy as copy/paste several commands from a guide.
Eh, If you're messing around with FreeNAS, you really should consider pfSense which I regard as it's router/firewall/gateway second cousin. I was (and still am for access points) a Tomato and DD-WRT user, but pfSense is a very powerful system that will run on low end x86 hardware, is also FreeBSD based, has function packages, a great web interface and pretty good documentation (published even!). For a VPN I recommend OpenVPN as the least complicated and clients on almost any platform you can think of and then some. OpenVPN is very easy to set up on Tomato, dd-WRT and pfSense. (IPSEC is for security through obscurity commercial standards obsessed masochists. :p