Welcome to tinc!
Latest stable version: 1.0.36
Latest prerelease from the 1.1 branch: 1.1pre18
Latest news:
Version 1.1pre18 released.
- Check all Address statements when making outgoing connections.
- Make more variables safe for use in invitations.
- Allow
tinc --force join
to accept all variables sent in an invitation. - Make sure the stop command works on Windows if tincd is running in the foreground.
- Handle DOS line endings in invitation files.
- Double-quote node names in dump graph output.
- Prevent large amounts of UDP probes being sent consecutively.
- Try harder to reconnect with unreachable nodes.
- Generate tinc-up.bat on Windows.
- Fix a possible infinite loop when adding Subnets to a running tincd.
- Allow a tun/tap filedescriptor to be passed through a UNIX socket.
- Use auto-clone tun/tap devices as default on FreeBSD and DragonFlyBSD.
Thanks to Fabian Maurer, Ilia Pavlikhin, Maciej S. Szmigiero, Pacien Tran-Girard, Aaron Li, Andreas Rammhold, Rosen Penev, Shengjing Zhu, Werner Schreiber, iczero and leptonyu for their contributions to this version of tinc.
What is tinc?
tinc is a Virtual Private Network (VPN) daemon that uses tunnelling and encryption to create a secure private network between hosts on the Internet. tinc is Free Software and licensed under the GNU General Public License version 2 or later. Because the VPN appears to the IP level network code as a normal network device, there is no need to adapt any existing software. This allows VPN sites to share information with each other over the Internet without exposing any information to others. In addition, tinc has the following features:
- Encryption, authentication and compression
- All traffic is optionally compressed using zlib or LZO, and LibreSSL or OpenSSL is used to encrypt the traffic and protect it from alteration with message authentication codes and sequence numbers.
- Automatic full mesh routing
- Regardless of how you set up the tinc daemons to connect to each other, VPN traffic is always (if possible) sent directly to the destination, without going through intermediate hops.
- NAT traversal
- As long as one node in the VPN allows incoming connections on a public IP address (even if it is a dynamic IP address), tinc will be able to do NAT traversal, allowing direct communication between peers.
- Easily expand your VPN
- When you want to add nodes to your VPN, all you have to do is add an extra configuration file, there is no need to start new daemons or create and configure new devices or network interfaces.
- Ability to bridge ethernet segments
- You can link multiple ethernet segments together to work like a single segment, allowing you to run applications and games that normally only work on a LAN over the Internet.
- Runs on many operating systems and supports IPv6
- Currently Linux, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, OS X, Solaris, Windows 2000, XP, Vista and Windows 7 and 8 platforms are supported. See our section about supported platforms for more information about the state of the ports. tinc has also full support for IPv6, providing both the possibility of tunneling IPv6 traffic over its tunnels and of creating tunnels over existing IPv6 networks.