Tunnelblick is a free, open source graphic user interface for on OS X and macOS. It provides easy control of OpenVPN client and/or server connections.

It comes as a ready-to-use application with all necessary binaries and drivers (including OpenVPN, easy-rsa, and tun/tap drivers). No additional installation is necessary — just. Brother hl 2040 printer driver install.

To use Tunnelblick you need access to a VPN server: your computer is one end of the tunnel and the VPN server is the other end. For more information, see. Tunnelblick is free software licensed under the and may be distributed only in accordance with the terms of that license. OpenVPN is a registered trademark of OpenVPN Inc.

On This Page Release Downloads To be notified of new releases, use Tunnelblick's built-in update mechanism or subscribe to the. Beta versions are suitable for most users. See for details. There have been false reports of malware in Tunnelblick. See for details.

Tunnelblick For Windows

Free

Beta (build 5170, OS X 10.7.5+, Intel-64 only) released 2018-11-20 SHA1: d772c56de7d9bccb444cafb76fab10c63c8eed97 MD5: 90448f726947 SHA256: ad40202e659fcfbe1cef55026e2d961eb25ed74a26b9a884892d6a Stable (build 5150, OS X 10.7.5+, Intel-64 only) released 2018-09-29 SHA1: 59d97de88e774952acd46114f445db9cf3029977 MD5: 2e6874aced808f6c11bc5a1b3c2d5e96 SHA256: afab743ca6e7d25848b67fc5dee6fc66f496b297916a4d185a8b53 Older See the. Includes versions for OS X 10.4 - 10.7.4. Uninstaller Please read before using Tunnelblick Uninstaller (build 5090, OS X 10.7.5+, Intel-64 only) released 2018-06-26 SHA1: c4577e1ab0cc646ba983 MD5: 0b8c3f0898ca88f4bbe90fe61271d7ab SHA256: 62b528da3212fd78146c6bcf03d88f4fb61f4f62029a3af791ef42 Verifying Downloads You should verify all downloads.

Tunnelblick for pc

Tunnelblick Windows 10

Even though https:, the.dmg format, and the application's OS X digital signature provide some protection, they can be circumvented. Verifying Hashes Comparing the SHA256, SHA1, and MD5 hashes of your downloaded file with the official published ones will provide additional assurance that the download is legitimate and has not been modified. You can compare the hashes with programs included with macOS without the need to install additional software. To compute the hashes of a file you've downloaded, type the following into /Applications/Utilities/Terminal: shasum -a 256 path-to-the-file openssl sha1 path-to-the-file openssl md5 path-to-the-file Then compare the computed hashes with the values shown near the link for the downloaded file. (Don't type ' path-to-the-file' — type the path to the file, that is, the sequence of folders that contain the file plus the file name (e.g.

An easy way to get it into Terminal is to drag/drop the file anywhere in the Terminal window. The pointer will turn into a green and white plus sign ('+') to indicate the path will be dropped. So you would type ' shasum -a 256 ' — with a space at the end — and then drag/drop the disk image file anywhere in the Terminal window.) For additional assurance that the hashes displayed on this site have not been compromised, the hashes are also available in the description of each 'Release' on, which is hosted and administered separately from this site.

Verifying GnuPG Signatures Recent Tunnelblick disk images are also signed with. To prepare for verifying signatures, you should download and install GnuPG 2.2.3 or higher, and then add the (key ID 6BB9367E, fingerprint 76DF 975A 1C56 4277 4FB0 9868 FF5F D80E 6BB9 367E) to your trusted GnuPG keyring by typing the following into /Applications/Utilities/Terminal: gpg -import TunnelblickSecurityPublicKey.asc. To verify the signature of a file, download the corresponding signature file and then type the following into /Applications/Utilities/Terminal: gpg -verify path-to-the-signature-file path-to-the-disk-image-file The result should be similar to the following: gpg: Signature made Sat Dec 16 19: EST gpg: using RSA key B4D96F0D6A58E335A0F4923A2FF3A2B2DC6FD12C gpg: Good signature from 'Tunnelblick Security ' ultimate User Contributions These downloads have been contributed by users and usually help deal with special circumstances. They are not endorsed or checked by the Tunnelblick project, and you use them at your own risk.

To contribute a download, or post it on the. Before using these scripts, please read.

(Actually, everyone using a VPN should read that!) Note: these scripts are executed as root. Scripts to Unload Cisco Tun Kext: SHA1: d3b09a2284de2862be7d5508930b28 MD5: f6f07ee5c7206a5b056b12 Contributed by 'petiepooo'.

These scripts unload the Cisco AnyConnect tun kext before a Tunnelblick connection is started, and reload the Cisco tun kext after a Tunnelblick connection is stopped. (The Cisco kext interferes with Tunnelblick's operation of tun connections.) Scripts to Mount/Unmount a Volume: SHA1: eb69727620fa8c46633d9ccf9f86c4b258fea7e6 MD5: 5b3b04bea43403b2a709aaa4c92d7473 Contributed by John Griffis. These scripts mount a volume after a configuration is connected and unmount it when the configuration is disconnected. Scripts must be edited before use (in any plain-text editor) to specify details of the volume to be connected. For a note about connecting to a CIFS account, see. Scripts to Monitor Connection Time and Bandwidth Use: SHA1: 384b370967e722eacb2f3a782e8c33 MD5: 2c23ed5cfb5ea36fd5dd74 Contributed by 'vkapovit'. These scripts provide a mechanism for the user to be alerted when the VPN has been up for more than 20 minutes or when bandwidth has exceeded 100MB.

See for details. Requires Growl.

Download

Includes compiled binaries; use at your own risk. Scripts to Launch and Kill a Program: SHA1: 977aa7cc55f3e191b50057fe766c426af01808eb MD5: beccc55286b398fe0a8bcb798e25a883 Contributed by 'anonymous'. These scripts cause a program to be launched when a VPN is connected and then killed when the VPN is disconnected. It can be used with a torrent program, for example, so that the program is only active when the VPN is connected. Note that there may be a short time after the VPN has been disconnected before the program is killed. Download Integrity In June 2015 there was much discussion (and outrage) about SourceForge providing downloads that contain unwanted or malicious software; SourceForge has changed their policies to help avoid this.

Tunnelblick binaries were hosted on SourceForge from the fall of 2013, when Google Code stopped hosting new binaries, until 2015-07-17, when they were moved from SourceForge to GitHub. Tunnelblick protects against unwanted software insertions by publishing the SHA1 and MD5 hashes for each of our downloads. You should verify the hashes of all Tunnelblick downloads by following the instructions above. Additional safeguards automatically protect updates performed by Tunnelblick's built-in update mechanism:. Updates are controlled by tunnelblick.net and all update data is transported via https:. Update downloads contain digital signatures to verify they have not been modified. (This is in addition to the OS X digital signature of the Tunnelblick application itself.) See.