Once you remove the #define MAX, it compiles out of the box

Obviously the /dev/tap0 usage needs to be ported to if_tun or equivalent,
and there appears to be some code in nstx_tuntap.c for that already, but
the README says it's imcomplete

I have found many airports that allow unrestricted DNS and/or ICMP traffic

You could try and port nest over for ICMP tunneling, it was developed on
FreeBSD so it may not be hard to port.  Then there's "GNU Virtual Private
Ethernet" which bridges ethernet over ICMP or UDP or DNS/UDP or other
protocls, and claims to work on openbsd.  I haven't actually tried it yet..

Constantine A. Murenin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi!
> 
> I'm wondering if there is a port of NSTX server and client for *BSD
> systems?  (I'd like to set-up OpenBSD as the server, and OpenBSD or OS
> X 10.4 as the client.)
> 
> The stuff that I've downloaded from
> http://nstx.dereference.de/nstx/nstx-1.1-beta6.tgz says that it's
> linux only.
> 
> P.S. Are there any access points left in the airports, trains or other
> places that still allow unlimited and unrestricted DNS usage? :)
> 
> Cheers,
> Constantine.

-- 
There is no certainty, there is only opportunity

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