TLS Handshake fail
Posted: Mon Aug 15, 2022 3:31 pm
Hello all,
I am not new to computers but am new to networking and definitely Amahi and Fedora. It took 3 tries to get up and running and I am able to access the HDA locally and remotely with the mylink.yourhda.com.
I installed Fedora 27 with Amahi 11. As stated everything locally and somewhat remotely are working fine until I decided to try and get OpenVPN with HDA connect 3 up and running so I may access my shares remotely.
Anyway, after running through the WIKI many times, uninstalling and reinstalling I was about to give up. I am working from a Win10 Dell Laptop. I can not for the life of me get the "A" to turn green! Like I said I was about to give up. But I decided to copy the entire HDA Connect config files to a thumb drive. I took those and the .exe and installed them on my Desktop which currently is running Win11.
I hit the Connect and it connected the first try. I can open my file explorer on it and \\hda straight to my shares as it should work. So, I took another Laptop again with Win10 and installed HDA connect 3, copied the config files over but it produces the exact same handshake error I get with my laptop. We also have an HP Laptop I installed on and it won't connect either. Yes it also has Win10 loaded.
I went back to the WIKI and followed the advise with creating the ta.key, making the appropriate changes. One thing I noticed during that process is when it asked me to restart the vpn service, it told me I didn't have one running. Well if that is the case then how does my Win11 desktop connect??? It isn't making any sense. Also, after re configuring the server config the desk top with the original config files still connects. But my laptops still will not. Either with the new config post wiki or prior config prior to running through it.
Can anyone tell my why my desktop is connecting but none of my laptops are? I really do not want to upgrade all the laptops to Win11, and I am not even sure that is the smoking gun. The only thing I haven't tried is changing from UDP to TCP? Should I even consider trying that? From what I've read TCP isn't as secure?
Bottom line I really need all these Win10 Laptops to be able to connect via VPN. Suggestions and help pointing me in the right direction would greatly be appreciate.
Thanks,
IUE770
I am not new to computers but am new to networking and definitely Amahi and Fedora. It took 3 tries to get up and running and I am able to access the HDA locally and remotely with the mylink.yourhda.com.
I installed Fedora 27 with Amahi 11. As stated everything locally and somewhat remotely are working fine until I decided to try and get OpenVPN with HDA connect 3 up and running so I may access my shares remotely.
Anyway, after running through the WIKI many times, uninstalling and reinstalling I was about to give up. I am working from a Win10 Dell Laptop. I can not for the life of me get the "A" to turn green! Like I said I was about to give up. But I decided to copy the entire HDA Connect config files to a thumb drive. I took those and the .exe and installed them on my Desktop which currently is running Win11.
I hit the Connect and it connected the first try. I can open my file explorer on it and \\hda straight to my shares as it should work. So, I took another Laptop again with Win10 and installed HDA connect 3, copied the config files over but it produces the exact same handshake error I get with my laptop. We also have an HP Laptop I installed on and it won't connect either. Yes it also has Win10 loaded.
I went back to the WIKI and followed the advise with creating the ta.key, making the appropriate changes. One thing I noticed during that process is when it asked me to restart the vpn service, it told me I didn't have one running. Well if that is the case then how does my Win11 desktop connect??? It isn't making any sense. Also, after re configuring the server config the desk top with the original config files still connects. But my laptops still will not. Either with the new config post wiki or prior config prior to running through it.
Can anyone tell my why my desktop is connecting but none of my laptops are? I really do not want to upgrade all the laptops to Win11, and I am not even sure that is the smoking gun. The only thing I haven't tried is changing from UDP to TCP? Should I even consider trying that? From what I've read TCP isn't as secure?
Bottom line I really need all these Win10 Laptops to be able to connect via VPN. Suggestions and help pointing me in the right direction would greatly be appreciate.
Thanks,
IUE770