![]() ![]() You may have to renumber if you've used something common. Also, make sure your home network range doesn't conflict with anything at work. Since you're controlling your home server, you can make it more likely to work by not running your default route through it, instead adding an explicit route to your home network. In other words, if you've got two networks that say 'send everything here', and then either of them fails to set explicit routes for their specific networks, then things will break on one or the other. If they've got, say, ten networks, that saves them some configuration time, but then will break with any other VPN that grabs the default route. Worse, some of them never even properly configure their VPN instead of adding specific routes for their known network addresses, they depend on the catchall route for everything. If you try to connect to two networks that are doing this, you can have major issues. Some work VPNs require that all your traffic goes down the VPN, including stuff bound for the Internet, and then re-originates from their remote network. If you're trying to use two remote networks that use the same IP ranges, things will break. This can also work just fine, but all the addresses need to be non-conflicting. It gets more complex when you're connecting to larger networks, because the client will need to add routes for any IP ranges in the remote network that aren't on the same wire. If you're just directly connecting to some remote network, then as long as everything is on that same virtual wire, there's nothing really stopping you from doing several at once. Navigate to to check if you are connected to VPN also do a reboot to make sure it persists.You should be able to use two VPNs at once if the clients aren't trying to handhold you, and the server isn't being lazy. You are now done configuring OpenVPN client as service on Windows OS. ![]() ‘OpenVpnService’ would automatically connect you to respective Note: You are not required to use OpenVPN GUI client any more. OpenVPN configuration file should connect right away and on every boot automatically. Locate OpenVpnService (Not OpenVPN Legacy Service or OpenVPN Interactive Service) and double-click on it.Ī dialog box appears, change Startup type to Automatic, and click Apply followed by OK. Start Run application from Start Menu or by using keyboard shortcut combination Ctrl+R and input services.msc in the text field there and click OK. Step 4 - Configuring OpenVPN service to start automatically on boot When prompted for Administrative permission, grant it to Continue. Navigate to Program files - OpenVPN - config folder of your main ovpn file and th file to OpenVPN config folder Open Notepad application and type your PrivateVPN username in first line and password in second, save the file as th. Step 2 - Storing your credentials in a file ovpn file in Notepad application, look for # Crypto section and make the following changes as seen in the image below: auth-user-pass th ![]() ![]() Step 1 - Editing your OpenVPN client configuration We need to pick a single configuration for a particular location that weįor the purpose of this guide, I am going to use PrivateVPN’s OpenVPN-TUN-UDP configuration for India. In order to get OpenVPN GUI to auto-start and auto-connect on boot, Configure OpenVPN client as service on Windows ![]()
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