PPTP Split Tunnelling

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP








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I have VPN on Linux with PPTP protocol. What I want to do is some kind of split tunnelling, which means that I need to use my real IP on some specific internet software, and use the VPN on the rest of internet.



I'm a beginner in Linux, but already asked some people and they said it can be done by a lot of methods, so I'm looking for easiest and fastest way. My VPN is installed by command line in /etc/ppp/peers/vpnfile and in /etc/ppp/ip-up.d/vpn-route.










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  • 1




    Yes, you can do it. Here is the answer for the similar question.
    – Svetlana Linuxenko
    Feb 14 at 12:47










  • I think the best solution would be to create an Ubuntu virtual machine. Run your VPN client on this VM, and use the VM as your main OS. Run the specific application on the host OS. Simple.
    – Rick
    Feb 14 at 12:57










  • Thank YOU Svetlana I hope this will work, from the first look I see that it is exactly what I need, but it will take sone time to do with my beginner linux knowledge.
    – DeviL54
    Feb 14 at 13:22










  • if the side of your "real ip" is not mocu, some simple host-routes would probably do the trick
    – Robert Riedl
    Feb 14 at 14:17














up vote
1
down vote

favorite












I have VPN on Linux with PPTP protocol. What I want to do is some kind of split tunnelling, which means that I need to use my real IP on some specific internet software, and use the VPN on the rest of internet.



I'm a beginner in Linux, but already asked some people and they said it can be done by a lot of methods, so I'm looking for easiest and fastest way. My VPN is installed by command line in /etc/ppp/peers/vpnfile and in /etc/ppp/ip-up.d/vpn-route.










share|improve this question



















  • 1




    Yes, you can do it. Here is the answer for the similar question.
    – Svetlana Linuxenko
    Feb 14 at 12:47










  • I think the best solution would be to create an Ubuntu virtual machine. Run your VPN client on this VM, and use the VM as your main OS. Run the specific application on the host OS. Simple.
    – Rick
    Feb 14 at 12:57










  • Thank YOU Svetlana I hope this will work, from the first look I see that it is exactly what I need, but it will take sone time to do with my beginner linux knowledge.
    – DeviL54
    Feb 14 at 13:22










  • if the side of your "real ip" is not mocu, some simple host-routes would probably do the trick
    – Robert Riedl
    Feb 14 at 14:17












up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite











I have VPN on Linux with PPTP protocol. What I want to do is some kind of split tunnelling, which means that I need to use my real IP on some specific internet software, and use the VPN on the rest of internet.



I'm a beginner in Linux, but already asked some people and they said it can be done by a lot of methods, so I'm looking for easiest and fastest way. My VPN is installed by command line in /etc/ppp/peers/vpnfile and in /etc/ppp/ip-up.d/vpn-route.










share|improve this question















I have VPN on Linux with PPTP protocol. What I want to do is some kind of split tunnelling, which means that I need to use my real IP on some specific internet software, and use the VPN on the rest of internet.



I'm a beginner in Linux, but already asked some people and they said it can be done by a lot of methods, so I'm looking for easiest and fastest way. My VPN is installed by command line in /etc/ppp/peers/vpnfile and in /etc/ppp/ip-up.d/vpn-route.







vpn routing pptp tunnel






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edited Apr 28 at 18:51









Zanna

48.2k13120228




48.2k13120228










asked Feb 14 at 11:25









DeviL54

61




61







  • 1




    Yes, you can do it. Here is the answer for the similar question.
    – Svetlana Linuxenko
    Feb 14 at 12:47










  • I think the best solution would be to create an Ubuntu virtual machine. Run your VPN client on this VM, and use the VM as your main OS. Run the specific application on the host OS. Simple.
    – Rick
    Feb 14 at 12:57










  • Thank YOU Svetlana I hope this will work, from the first look I see that it is exactly what I need, but it will take sone time to do with my beginner linux knowledge.
    – DeviL54
    Feb 14 at 13:22










  • if the side of your "real ip" is not mocu, some simple host-routes would probably do the trick
    – Robert Riedl
    Feb 14 at 14:17












  • 1




    Yes, you can do it. Here is the answer for the similar question.
    – Svetlana Linuxenko
    Feb 14 at 12:47










  • I think the best solution would be to create an Ubuntu virtual machine. Run your VPN client on this VM, and use the VM as your main OS. Run the specific application on the host OS. Simple.
    – Rick
    Feb 14 at 12:57










  • Thank YOU Svetlana I hope this will work, from the first look I see that it is exactly what I need, but it will take sone time to do with my beginner linux knowledge.
    – DeviL54
    Feb 14 at 13:22










  • if the side of your "real ip" is not mocu, some simple host-routes would probably do the trick
    – Robert Riedl
    Feb 14 at 14:17







1




1




Yes, you can do it. Here is the answer for the similar question.
– Svetlana Linuxenko
Feb 14 at 12:47




Yes, you can do it. Here is the answer for the similar question.
– Svetlana Linuxenko
Feb 14 at 12:47












I think the best solution would be to create an Ubuntu virtual machine. Run your VPN client on this VM, and use the VM as your main OS. Run the specific application on the host OS. Simple.
– Rick
Feb 14 at 12:57




I think the best solution would be to create an Ubuntu virtual machine. Run your VPN client on this VM, and use the VM as your main OS. Run the specific application on the host OS. Simple.
– Rick
Feb 14 at 12:57












Thank YOU Svetlana I hope this will work, from the first look I see that it is exactly what I need, but it will take sone time to do with my beginner linux knowledge.
– DeviL54
Feb 14 at 13:22




Thank YOU Svetlana I hope this will work, from the first look I see that it is exactly what I need, but it will take sone time to do with my beginner linux knowledge.
– DeviL54
Feb 14 at 13:22












if the side of your "real ip" is not mocu, some simple host-routes would probably do the trick
– Robert Riedl
Feb 14 at 14:17




if the side of your "real ip" is not mocu, some simple host-routes would probably do the trick
– Robert Riedl
Feb 14 at 14:17















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