Pptp Vpn Client Alternatives For Mac Os Sierra
PPTP VPN Client Alternatives for Mac OS Sierra How to restore PPTP VPN Access back to Mac OS Sierra If you’ve recently upgraded to Mac OS Sierra you may have noticed that your VPN settings have been deleted during the upgrade process.
Lately I discovered that connecting to a VPN via PPTP option has been removed in the new mac os - sierra.I tried multiple application to do so - all failed.How can I connect to my VPN over PPTP?
ps. I don't want to use L2TP because I don't have a pre shared key (I also don't know what it is).
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2 Answers
The FlowVPN client is free (and works with any provider).
It supports PPTP and OpenVPN on macOS Sierra:
Just overwrite the FlowVPN server address with any server and it connects.
A.BadgerA.BadgerVPN PPTP in Sierra is dismissed because it is not a secure method of communication.To solve the problem; you can install software Shimo that works with the operating system Sierra
Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged vpnpptpmacos-sierra or ask your own question.
Windows Migration Assistant For Mac Os Sierra
Apple has removed PPTP VPN support in Sierra due to security concerns. See: https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT206844
Unfortunately, I need to connect to an organisation that only supports PPTP (not my decision).
I know about Shimo, but it's $50 and has a lot of features I don't need.
I was hoping to find a free or open source solution? A command-line-only option would be fine for macOS.
I'm even open to more esoteric solutions (e.g. a lightweight linux VM that connects to the VPN, and then shares the connection with host OS, but not sure how feasible this would be or how to do it).
Edit: I see the command-line tool pppd
is still present in macOS Sierra, so perhaps it's possible to call this directly?
Edit 2: I tried following this tutorial with an options file from the ArchWiki, and a custom route in /etc/ppp/ip-up
, but it gives an error (publish_entry SCDSet() failed: Success!
) when I try to run the pppd
command, the pppd
daemon doesn't seem to be running, and the ppp0
interface isn't showing up in ifconfig
. I don't know much about networks and network interfaces, so I'm finding this very confusing! Any help would be much appreciated.
4 Answers
The FlowVPN client is free (and works with any provider).
Mac Pptp Vpn Client Sierra
It supports PPTP and OpenVPN on macOS Sierra and High Sierra:
Just overwrite the FlowVPN server address with any server and it connects.
Just paid $55 for Shimo 4. It works. A google search for Shimo 4 VPN will guide your to the correct link. It supports PPTP, L2TP, OpenVPN, SSH, and a few more. I even found I can connect to some L2TP server with Shimo while I cannot connect with the built-in OS X VPN client. The price is a bit expensive, but it works pretty well for me, so I paid for it. I guess they might have some sales boost as the new OS X rolled out.
I found this when searching for how to fix a error I was getting in Shimo when trying to connect to PPTP VPN. I didn't get many helpful search results so even though this doesn't answer the original question, others might land here looking for help for this error:
LCP: timeout sending Config-Requests
I'm running a trial of Shimo on OS X 10.12 (Sierra) and the VPN server is on Windows 2012 R2.
I also posted this answer on another question because it helped me work out the solution. A recommendation posted by @wgui was to use the 'silent' option which didn't work but the description given for 'silent' lead me to figuring it out.
The fix for me was to use the 'passive' option. In Shimo, it can be enabled in the 'Expert' section. You should see it as one of the choices given when you add a parameter key (just leave the value blank). Once it was set my connection worked fine.
VPN Tracker also supports PPTP it's not free but presumed to be the most professional VPN Software for the Mac. PPTP connections are automatically imported into VPN Tracker if launched on El Capitan prior to the upgrade and if the connection fails, there is a professional support team. Yes it's a paid product.
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protected by Community♦Oct 27 '16 at 6:15
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