

Note that some of these IPs won’t appear until later. I setup the otherhaxx the way I would any other wireless router and connected my Roku wirelessly to otherhaxx. So I connected my Mac to my primary wireless network haxx, then plugged the Mac’s Ethernet port to the upstream of my second wireless router otherhaxx. Set this part up however you need, I did this wired to wired and it worked, too. This post, Share your VPN with Mac OS X El Capitan, felt like it got me closer.Īnd finally, this post suggested that I setup two rules instead of one and voila! Success. This comment provides a majority of the code below.

The commands I used there were deprecated, so I moved on and found this awesome comment on StackExchange to get me started.
#Freedome vpn for mac os how to
So I revisited my blog post that I wrote a few years ago, How to Setup NAT on Lion and Mountain Lion, because I figured I needed to do some command-line magic. I found that as soon as I successfully connected to Freedome, my Internet Sharing would stop working. Try, Try Againįirst, I tried simply connecting to Freedome then turning on my Mac’s Internet Sharing. Once I confirmed that sharing a Freedome encrypted connection is supported and within the TOS, I began the 6-hour journey into sharing my VPN connection with my Roku. Then I needed to share my connection with my Roku, but Freedome is an application that has to be run on a phone or computer and routers aren’t supported. After finding that it suited my requirements, I finally decided on a solid VPN – F-Secure Freedome – as recommended by a friend in security.
