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- #!/usr/bin/env bash
-
- # Networkmanager override to set no-dtls this is required for
- # Overstock Juniper Pulse VPN as they do not have proper UDP set up
- # and without that, CPU shoots over 100% and the logs fill up fast.
- #
- # Found the binary path search order in
- # https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/NetworkManager-openconnect/\
- # blob/master/src/nm-openconnect-service.c
- #
- # static const char *openconnect_binary_paths[] =
- # {
- # "/usr/bin/openconnect",
- # "/usr/sbin/openconnect",
- # "/usr/local/bin/openconnect",
- # "/usr/local/sbin/openconnect",
- # "/opt/bin/openconnect",
- # "/opt/sbin/openconnect",
- # NULL
- # };
- #
- # And found the hint of which flag to add on the OpenConnect Wiki
- #
- # The second phase uses that cookie to connect to a tunnel via HTTPS,
- # and data packets can be passed over the resulting connection. When
- # possible, a UDP tunnel is also configured: AnyConnect uses DTLS,
- # while Juniper and GlobalProtect use UDP-encapsulated ESP. The UDP
- # tunnel may be disabled with --no-dtls, but is preferred when
- # correctly supported by the server and network for performance
- # reasons. (TCP performs poorly and unreliably over TCP-based
- # tunnels; see http://sites.inka.de/~W1011/devel/tcp-tcp.html.)
- # https://www.infradead.org/openconnect/manual.html
- #/usr/sbin/openconnect --no-dtls ${@}
-
- /usr/local/sbin/openconnect
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