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Save rkueny/301f7ead21ed2a0ee8bbe2d755bed90b to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
mkdir temp && cd temp | |
# for linux 'amd64' architecture install those packages: | |
sudo apt-get install libx11-6:i386 libpam0g:i386 libstdc++5:i386 lib32z1 lib32ncurses5 lib32bz2-1.0 | |
wget https://vpnportal.aktifbank.com.tr/SNX/INSTALL/snx_install.sh | |
sudo ./snx_install.sh | |
cd .. && rm -rf temp/ |
I used to work with SNX connecting directly to CheckPoint VPN servers.
Meanwhile, CheckPoint VPN/snx was updated for TLS 1.2 and now CheckPoint checks for the user agent. Afaik, neither the old standalone version of SNX in the command line, nor snxvpn work anymore. Nowadays, it has to be SNX+CShell agent+Java+an Internet browser.
SNX and CShell install have also their share of problems, and I wrote a script to get around them and install them in a chroot, supporting many Linux distributions.
See https://github.com/ruyrybeyro/chrootvpn and the new chosen answer for https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/450131/vpn-ssl-network-extender-in-firefox
Thank you, your solution worked for me!
In the meanwhile my solution was slightly adapted to Debian 12 and more linux distros.
I used to work with SNX connecting directly to CheckPoint VPN servers.
Meanwhile, CheckPoint VPN/snx was updated for TLS 1.2 and now CheckPoint checks for the user agent. Afaik, neither the old standalone version of SNX in the command line, nor snxvpn work anymore. Nowadays, it has to be SNX+CShell agent+Java+an Internet browser.
SNX and CShell install have also their share of problems, and I wrote a script to get around them and install them in a chroot, supporting many Linux distributions.
See https://github.com/ruyrybeyro/chrootvpn and the new chosen answer for https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/450131/vpn-ssl-network-extender-in-firefox