• nutbutter@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 year ago

      Exactly. Their VPN app on Linux does not even have WireGuard options, let alone the Stealth Protocol. No port-forwarding either. There are so mamy features on Windows that they do not provide Linux users.

        • nutbutter@discuss.tchncs.de
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          1 year ago

          I change servers very frequently. For that I have to download a lot of config files. Considering, I am paying Proton just as much a Windows user, I shouldn’t have to do all this work.

          • SnowboardBum@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            “Shouldn’t have to”

            I mean, you don’t have to. There’s other services. Mullvad or whatever.

            Having a handful of config files and switching to them isn’t the hardest thing. It works. Not like they’re preventing you from it.

      • winterayars
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        1 year ago

        I have a seedbox built with ProtonVPN and Linux. You can’t use their app but the manual configuration does work. (Port forwarding is annoying though, i had to write a script to manage it.)

          • winterayars
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            1 year ago

            A lot of manual work. The easy version is i used qemu to create a fedora server vm. If you’re on windows, virtual box or whatever should work just as well. With that up, I configured the manual ProtonVPN wireguard connection with port forwarding according to their configuration guides. Note that you can only request a port from them for 60 seconds at a time, so a script will be needed there to keep it active. I forwarded the port I got through firewall-cmd and then tested to ensure it was open. I configured my router’s firewall to give the VM a set up but that may not really be necessary and you don’t need to do port forwarding on the router firewall with this setup.

            From there, I installed a BitTorrent client. I went with transmission because it has a good cli, but if you’re not planning to automate this whole process something like deluge or qbittorrent will probably work better. I configured to to bind it’s IP to the ProtonVPN VPN IP and to upload through the port i got from ProtonVPN.

            At that point, I ran a bunch of tests to confirm it was forwarding the port correctly and all the traffic went through the VPN. I could find the sites I used to confirm the thing was working as expected if you like. I also tested that it was able to upload and stuff

            And that’s it. That should approximately be functional.

            The big downside: If the port you’re getting from ProtonVPN changes you’ll have to manually change the VM’s firewall and the port used in your torrent client. That’s what the automation is basically doing.

    • SinningStromgald@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      On another post about this someone said the closed beta for Mac is next then after the Mac version is done they will start on a Linux version. So it will happen just not now.