root 8849 0.0 0.0 55656 2736 pts/2 S+ 00:21 0:00 sudo ./hma-vpn.sh -p udp phoenix (loc1 s1) ----->script command vpn client root 8850 0.0 0.0 13496 1776 pts/2 S+ 00:21 0:00 /bin/bash ./hma-vpn.sh -p udp phoenix (loc1 s1)
Do so either by first running "su" and then proceed, or prefix each command with "sudo". Feel free to use other VPN connection methods, e.g. PPTP or L2TP via a GUI like LXDE, Gnome, Unity; PPTP via command line, or gOpenVPN via GUI. To use the proxyserver from outside of our local network, you'll need to create a port forwarding rule on your router
Jul 17, 2013 · sudo ~/scripts/hma-vpn.sh -l >~/servers.txt. That will then create a file called servers.txt in your home folder that you can examine later with nano or Leafpad. Aliases. I appreciate that these commands are quite long and would be difficult to remember however we can quite easily make some aliases for them. sudo ~/scripts/hma-vpn.sh -l >~/servers.txt. That will then create a file called servers.txt in your home folder that you can examine later with nano or Leafpad. Aliases. I appreciate that these commands are quite long and would be difficult to remember however we can quite easily make some aliases for them. Arc Software Consultancy using the Raspberry Pi This site will be used to blog the experiences of the Arc Software team as they learn about, experiment with and develop software for the Raspberry Pi computer. sudo ~/scripts/hma-vpn.sh -l >~/servers.txt. That will then create a file called servers.txt in your home folder that you can examine later with nano or Leafpad. Aliases. I appreciate that these commands are quite long and would be difficult to remember however we can quite easily make some aliases for them.
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/bin/ls lists the files, but then I see these 2 lines below it: -bash: sed: command not found -bash: git: command not found - Blankman Sep 12 '12 at 2:40 In case your problem was with /etc/environment , use the following command (in centos 6): ssh -t root@