Struggling with OpenVPN on Raspberry Pi, need some real help

Struggling with OpenVPN on Raspberry Pi, need some real help

Graft

New member
Hey folks, I thought I'd be clever and set up OpenVPN on my Raspberry Pi to get a little more control over my VPN game. Thought I was all smart with my configs and scripts but nope, it's been nothing but headaches. It connects, yeah, but then I can't access my local network, or sometimes it just drops connection and I have to restart the Pi. Tried different protocols, reconfigured everything, but it's still acting up. I even followed some online guides that claim this setup is a breeze but clearly they lied. Has anyone actually managed to get this thing stable and working smoothly? Would love to hear some real-world advice, because at this point I'm just wasting time and bandwidth.
 
Thought I was all smart with my configs and scripts but nope, it's been nothing but headaches
Cool story. You thought you were all smart with configs and scripts but it's just headaches? Sounds like you jumped into the deep end w/o really knowing what you were doing. OpenVPN on a Pi is not a "set and forget" project, you gotta understand the network stuff behind it. Maybe stop blaming the configs and start troubleshooting your actual network setup instead of chasing some magical perfect config.
 
U dont get it. OpenVPN on a Pi is not the problem, its the configs and network environment. If u think flashing configs will fix bad setup or network issues, ur wasting ur time. Smh. Its not magic, u need to understand routing, firewalls, and stability concerns.
 
You're conflating the setup with the actual network fundamentals. If your VPN drops and you lose local access, it's usually routing or firewall issues, not configs. What does your tracking say when it disconnects?
 
cope with this, but have you actually tested the network basics outside of the VPN? like, does your local network work fine without VPN connected? if your local access is flaky even without VPN, then no amount of configs gonna fix that. people jump straight into VPN configs and forget that the root cause might be network topology or firewall rules that are just plain broken. if your local network is solid and only VPN drops, then yeah, configs are suspect but don't forget the basics first. even a noob knows that if your internet connection itself is unstable, the VPN will be a mess. so, what does your network look like when you disconnect VPN? can you ping your local devices? if not, fix that first. else you're just chasing ghosts
 
Maybe stop blaming the configs and start troubleshooting your actual network setup instead of chasing some magical perfect config
Prairie's right, but most people skip the basics and blame configs. Real-world tests show network issues are often hardware or firewall related, not configs. Prove it with numbers.
 
oof, sounds like a classic case of overcomplicating the basics. if your network isn't solid outside the vpn, configs won't save you. i swear, people forget to test their local setup first then blame the vpn. check your network stability, routers, firewalls, all that junk. and honestly, email still rules for health offers, social media is just for branding. if you want real stable access, get that core stuff sorted first. vpn on a pi is fun but only if your network is rock solid. good luck, bro.
 
What does your tracking say when it disconnec
Tracking? Nah, u gotta check ur logs and maybe use some ping tests or packet captures during disconnections. if u're not tracking what's happening when it drops, u're flying blind. what does ur router say? firewall logs?
 
Honestly I think a lot of these guys are missing the point. Yeah sure, check your network outside the VPN but if your goal is secure remote access then what's the point if the local network is flaky already? Also, everyone jumping to hardware and firewall issues forget that VPN configs are sometimes the problem. In my experience, if your VPN connection drops or is flaky it's almost always a mismatch in the tunnel settings or DNS issues. Just blindly blaming hardware or network stability without testing your configs is chasing ghosts.
 
Not to be that guy but if you're messing with configs and protocols w/o a solid understanding of your network, you're just throwing mud. VPNs are easy until they aren't and then people blame configs instead of their network. Hardware issues, firewall rules, even shitty routers can turn your VPN into a nightmare. TL;DR, get your local network rock solid first, then deal with the VPN. Until then, RIP inbox, you're wasting time chasing ghosts.
 
Hey folks, I thought I'd be clever and set up OpenVPN on my Raspberry Pi to get a little more control over my VPN game. Thought I was all smart with my configs and scripts but nope, it's been nothing but headaches. It connects, yeah, but then I can't access my local network, or sometimes it just drops connection and I have to restart the Pi.
Sounds like classic beginner's mistake. Setting up a VPN on a Pi to control things is fine but if you haven't nailed the basics first, you end up chasing ghosts. Let's walk through that step by step.
 
Sounds like classic beginner's mistake
Nah, not a beginner mistake. Setting up a Pi VPN right is more about the details and less about newbie status. I've seen plenty of pros screw it up too, it's just a tricky config puzzle not a sign of skill level.
 
Sounds like classic beginner's mistake
shrugs beginner's mistake or not, if you're still having issues after all that messing around, probably time to cut the chase and just get a pro to set it up right or use a prebuilt solution. Squeezing juice out of that Pi VPN is a pain unless you've nailed the basics first.
 
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