Hi Marcin, Please check your openvpn config file of Port number then check your firewalld config on the same port allowed or not. On Fri, Apr 22, 2016 at 6:28 AM, Marcin Trendota <moonwolf.rh@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Thursday 21 of April 2016 2:37:49 PM Gordon Messmer wrote: > > On 04/21/2016 01:33 PM, Marcin Trendota wrote: > > > It's OpenVPN on chamber. > > What port is it using? I don't see the standard port listed in your > > firewalld rules in either zone. > > 1194/udp. I added service openvpn and port 1194/udp (just to be sure) to > both zones - no change. > > [root@chamber openvpn]# firewall-cmd --list-all > home (default, active) > interfaces: enp3s0 tun0 vbr0 virbr0 vnet0 vnet1 > sources: > services: dhcp dhcpv6-client dns http https imaps ipp-client mdns nfs > openvpn samba samba-client vnc-server > ports: 143/tcp 26666/tcp 1194/udp > masquerade: no > forward-ports: > icmp-blocks: > rich rules: > > [root@chamber openvpn]# firewall-cmd --list-all --zone=external > external (active) > interfaces: enp1s0 > sources: > services: openvpn > ports: 26666/tcp 1194/udp > masquerade: yes > forward-ports: > icmp-blocks: > rich rules: > > > Also, you probably should specify tun+ instead of tun0, even if you > > think there will only be one tunnel up at any given time. > > Specify where? > > Despite the fact than i can't scan their ports, i'm able to ping those > hosts. > > Maybe it's not firewalld related? I can scan ports from chamber (home > router). I'll try tcpdump maybe, to see what is going on with packets? > > -- > Over And Out > MoonWolf > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx > https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > -- *Thanks,* *Manikandan.C* *System Administrator* _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos