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author | Dirk Olmes <dirk@xanthippe.ping.de> |
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date | Mon, 04 Nov 2013 04:31:32 +0100 |
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children | 1d9382b0329b |
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1 Title: Compiling the Shrew Soft VPN client on Raspberry Pi | |
2 Date: 2013-11-04 | |
3 Lang: en | |
4 | |
5 At work we deploy our software on machines that are located at customers sites. To access these machines we have created a VPN infrastructure that allows us to access the machines, deploy updates etc. | |
6 | |
7 I use [Shrewsoft's VPN client](https://www.shrew.net/software) to connect to the VPN infrastructure. This works so well on Linux that we recently began to replace the commercial VPN client used on Mac OS X with the Shrew Soft client - but that's a different story. | |
8 | |
9 Part of our infrastructure is a [Zabbix](https://www.zabbix.org/wiki/Main_Page) installation which is used to monitor our software via JMX. Zabbix features nice [screens](https://www.zabbix.com/documentation/2.0/manual/config/visualisation/screens) that can be used to create a dashboard-style overview over the current state of all hosts. | |
10 | |
11 To give everyone in the office more visibility on how our software is doing I'd like to display custom Zabbix screens on a big display located in the office. A [Raspberry Pi](http://www.raspberrypi.org/) looks like the perfect machine for powering the display - it's cheap, doesn't use much power and should even have a chrome browser to run in kiosk mode. | |
12 | |
13 Sounds like an interesting pet project so I ordered a Pi and some equipment. When it finally arrived I flashed the standard [NOOBS](http://downloads.raspberrypi.org/NOOBS_latest) starter pack. The main hurdle will be getting the Shrew Soft VPN client to run, I don't want to fiddle with the Linux distro right now. That'll be a hobby project for another day. | |
14 | |
15 Before attempting to compile the source all prerequisites must be installed: | |
16 | |
17 apt-get install cmake | |
18 apt-get install flex | |
19 apt-get install bison | |
20 apt-get install libedit-dev | |
21 apt-get install libssl-dev | |
22 | |
23 I did not install Qt and friends - the basic command line client will be sufficient for my setup. Connecting to the VPN will be fully automated anyway. | |
24 | |
25 The next step is to download the sources, unpack the tarball and compile the source. This turned out to be quite smooth using | |
26 | |
27 cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr -DETCDIR=/etc -DNATT=YES | |
28 | |
29 followed by the typical | |
30 | |
31 make | |
32 make install | |
33 | |
34 sequence. | |
35 | |
36 Now that the VPN client is installed, I exported the VPN settings from my Linux desktop machine and tried to run the command line client | |
37 | |
38 ikec -r vpn | |
39 | |
40 I should have been warned by the smooth compile. Of course the VPN client does not work out of the box, it crashes with | |
41 | |
42 *** glibc detected *** ikec: double free or corruption (out): 0x0191fa70 *** | |
43 Aborted | |
44 | |
45 Seems like I have to start digging the code. But that's another story for another day. Stay tuned. |