Moat 11 Posted ... Which router, or "open/free" firmware, can do 2 simultaneous connections to airvpn, and route traffic to either VPN connection based on the MAC address? computerMAC1->router->airvpn1connectioncomputerMAC2->router->airvpn1connectioncomputerMAC3->router->airvpn1connectioncomputerMAC4->router->airvpn2connectioncomputerMAC5->router->airvpn2connection Quote Hide Moat's signature Hide all signatures _____________________________________A moat does not protect against pigeons! Share this post Link to post
go558a83nk 364 Posted ... I know pfsense can, but that's not what you're asking for I'm guessing. Quote Share this post Link to post
zhang888 1066 Posted ... OpenWRT/LEDE can, but requires you to set custom Firewall zones, which is documented in the Wiki.Possibly AsusWRT can do it as well. Quote Hide zhang888's signature Hide all signatures Occasional moderator, sometimes BOFH. Opinions are my own, except when my wife disagrees. Share this post Link to post
Moat 11 Posted ... If I read enough papers and forums: DD-WRT, Tomato, pfsense, OpenWRT/LEDE all can, but only through command line configuration, often requiring scripts at router startup. None can in an easy end-user experience through a GUI. I need the latter as I am no coder, just an end user. Seems pretty useful for an end user to be able to GUI configure 2 SSID and 2 VPN on 1 router. Separate guests & home users, separate different machines/devices, separate different geographic bound services, etc. Hint at airvpn to create an "Eddie" for routers ? Quote Hide Moat's signature Hide all signatures _____________________________________A moat does not protect against pigeons! Share this post Link to post
go558a83nk 364 Posted ... If you live in a place where you can buy computer parts cheap you can build a machine quite suitable for running pfsense and the like for much less than a high powered consumer router costs...and yet have so much more control and the ability to run openvpn at high speed due to an AES-NI CPU. Then just use your current wifi router as an access point and control which gateway devices use on the gateway itself via NAT and Firewall rules. It's all done via a nice web GUI and there's a great guide on this forum. Quote Share this post Link to post
tehhellhound 8 Posted ... Tomato can either indirectly or by way of iptables. What I would do is specify an IP range routed through the VPN via CIDR notation in the GUI and then set static leases accordingly for the MAC addresses in question. Set the default lease range inside or outside the VPN range, depending on whether you want unknown MAC addresses routed through the VPN or not. Quote Share this post Link to post