xLively 0 Posted ... I'm trying to make it so all of my traffic goes through the VPN and no traffic goes around it. I am running windows 7. How can I route all of my traffic through AirVPN while also not allowing any traffic to go around it? Quote Share this post Link to post
strideram 11 Posted ... If you are not using the latest Eddie client (https://airvpn.org/windows_ex), I recommend you do use it. Under Preferences, it has many options to enable the behaviour you wish. Check the Routes and Advanced tabs. Additionally, there is an existing thread (https://airvpn.org/topic/9609-blocking-non-vpn-traffic-with-windows-firewall/) that you may find of use. I personally don't have any explicit routes defined. I believe the default there implies force all traffic through the VPN. Under Advanced, I enabled "DNS Switch", "Ensure tunnel uses AirVPN DNS", "Check if tunnel works" and three settings under "Windows Only". I have found these help resolve any DNS leak issues. You can confirm the same by visiting http://ipleak.net after connecting the VPN. Quote Share this post Link to post
mycrows 1 Posted ... If you are not using the latest Eddie client (https://airvpn.org/windows_ex), I recommend you do use it. Under Preferences, it has many options to enable the behaviour you wish. Check the Routes and Advanced tabs. Additionally, there is an existing thread (https://airvpn.org/topic/9609-blocking-non-vpn-traffic-with-windows-firewall/) that you may find of use. I personally don't have any explicit routes defined. I believe the default there implies force all traffic through the VPN. Under Advanced, I enabled "DNS Switch", "Ensure tunnel uses AirVPN DNS", "Check if tunnel works" and three settings under "Windows Only". I have found these help resolve any DNS leak issues. You can confirm the same by visiting http://ipleak.net after connecting the VPN. This solved my DNS leak on Windows 7 (diagnosed by ipleak.net). Thanks. FYI, I did have to disconnect and reconnect to a server before the leak was resolved. Quote Share this post Link to post
hashswag 11 Posted ... I'm now using the Eddie 2.6 client on Windows (was using directly OpenVPN previously). Question for Staff:Does the latest Eddie client with the Windows options mentioned above mean that we do not need Comodo Firewall to control DNS leaks on Windows? I did a test. Unchecked Force DNS and "Switch DHCP to Static". With Comodo enabled (set up properly to prevent DNS leaks), the DNS test at grc.com produced 3 DNS entries (two Amazon aws and one in Netherlands, all presumably belonging to AirVPN. I then disabled the firewall and enabled the settings within Eddie. This resulted in the same 3 DNS entries. Testing with the firewall off and unchecking those Windows Only settings resulted in 4 DNS entries. Quote Share this post Link to post