Dave's Place / Metamusing

Life and times of a webgeek

An open source alternative to Hamachi

If you’re not familiar with it, Hamachi is a very handy personal VPN tool that allows you to do things like connect the file system/s of your home computer/s or network to your work machine/s. It’s really very slick and extremely useful, especially if you’re sitting behind a firewall that’s blocking more easily accesible methods of connecting to remote machines. To help illustrate this, imagine you could access your home music collection from work, instead of having a copy of some of it on a thumbdrive/mp3 player/portable disc that you cart to work with you.

Hamachi is not open source, however, and that gives some folks pause since it’s hard to assess how secure the tool is, plus while it’s free for personal use there are no guarantees that it will remain so.

If you’re troubled by these issues, consider tinc as an alternative. It’s not nearly as easy to configure as Hamachi is, but it’s also free, is open source, and runs on more platforms than Hamachi does. Two thumbs up from me, though I did swear a good bit when I was first getting it running.

Category: Techno Geek
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  • dlh says:

    A brief mention, for those on Macs who want to experiment with Hamachi, if you prefer gui’s to text file editing, check out the unofficial gui for Hamachi here:

    http://homepage.mac.com/lxr/homepage/spaceants/hamachix/

    June 21, 2006 at 12:04 pm
  • Derek says:

    http://www.openvpn.net is also a great open source alternative. It’s SSL-based, and extremely easy to set up.

    April 24, 2007 at 7:53 pm
  • 0rca says:

    Have been using Hamachi since release, and it is very cool. Don’t really have any worries over security (if Steve Gibson said OK, then I ain’t gonna argue), but long-term future is a concern, and occasionally the entire service drops for several hours. So I looked into other solutions, including OpenVPN and tinc. While I could probably get either of these products running eventually, I doubt anyone else in the company would be able to. For me, Hamachi’s key benefit isn’t the security or technology….. it’s the ease of use. I can talk a completely computer-illiterate salesman through setup in just a few minutes.

    May 6, 2007 at 6:04 pm
  • dlh says:

    Hi,

    Yeah, fair and true enough, that – ease of use most often wins out over other considerations.

    May 8, 2007 at 9:42 am
  • TAC says:

    Too bad LogMeIn bought Hamachi, sucked the life out of it and now want hundreds of dollars a year for just a few computers to use it. Oh well, chalk this one up to capitalism I guess. I’m still looking for an alternative.

    June 3, 2007 at 12:36 am
  • kwukduck says:

    It’s not exactly fully OpenSource, but it uses OpenVPN’s core elements and is built upon that, with a nice GUI.
    works way better then hamachi, more stable, faster, less cpu usage, works peer-to-peer.
    Realy zero-config. unlike tinc or openvpn, which suck at configuring.
    uses XMPP/Jabber accounts, you can use your own existing or create a new one.
    Plus wippien is REAL freeware, no nags, no limits.

    June 19, 2007 at 6:02 am
  • DuckDuck says:

    I am running a search between Hamachi/VNN/Nantix/Leaf/Wippien/etc and this KwukDuck person is astroturfing and spamming over the Internet and appears to be focusing on trashing Hamachi. Which probably means that Hamachi is better !! .. LOL, thanks for a fat tip, very helpful.

    November 3, 2007 at 12:10 am
  • Someone says:

    Hey DuckDuck,
    can you name then all?
    ive looked at leaf, looks cool, and wippien also
    anyways
    can you list them all, i want hamachi alternatives, not like openvpn hard to configure
    i want the ones you know that are like hamachi or better
    like wippien, leaf..
    so far,
    Hamachi, Wippien, Leaf, anyother?
    make me a list thanks :D

    November 17, 2007 at 8:45 pm
  • Nisarg says:

    Hamachi really disappoints when I use it from my office. The speed really sucks. Not only it takes ages to connect to the remote peer, but it also fails to connect altogather.
    Wippien looks interesting – but there seems no Linux version of it.
    So what am I Leaf(t) with now?

    January 18, 2008 at 1:59 pm
  • dlh says:

    Hi Nisarg,

    You could try tinc, which I link to above. There’s also openvpn.net. Both of them are more complex to get running, but they’ll run on linux.

    January 18, 2008 at 3:31 pm
  • DesertSmurf says:

    Let me tell you something, you are the man for showing me this solution… I’ve passed up that website one or 2 times because it looked insignificant.
    I really appreciate you taking the time to inform everybody because I REALLY needed an open source solution.
    Thank you Dave.

    August 24, 2008 at 6:51 am
  • Orca says:

    A good time to re-visit this topic, I think. We still use Hamachi, but their recent change in licensing policy is forcing me to look around. The usual concern of not having my own mediation server is just amplified by having to pay hundreds of dollars a year.

    October 18, 2008 at 5:32 pm
  • Jon C says:

    You can check out
    gbridge at
    http://www.gbridge.com/
    or social vpn http://socialvpn.wordpress.com/
    Both are free. I think social vpn is open source.

    November 6, 2008 at 2:45 pm
  • Raze says:

    Can anybody like put some + and – things with all this alternatives. Would make things more easy. At least for one of the program.

    November 19, 2008 at 6:33 pm
  • RF says:

    You are correct, socialVPN is open-source (GPL v2).

    November 19, 2008 at 10:28 pm
  • jrm says:

    I know with Wippien you can actually create your own Link/Mediator which you can’t with others. If you do that it does need a public IP. but using the client you don’t need a public IP. Some of the above (OpenVPN, I think as well Tinc) a public IP is required. This is why I have chosen to use Wippien, becuase if I want more security, or the mediator site goes down to often, which it hasn’t, I can just create my own (by putting the provided program(s) on a server with a public IP). A downfall is that there isn’t a fully functional Linux version, still in its early testing. Also no version for Mac, and I am not sure if or when the developer will create one.

    Thank you,

    jrm

    November 24, 2008 at 4:07 pm
  • eus says:

    i preffer OpenVPN with Xtek Free VPN
    Download and try it at http://free.conexiunesecurizata.ro/free.conexiunesecurizata.ro.exe

    December 11, 2008 at 6:08 am
  • Drew says:

    Here’s another one:

    http://www.remobo.com

    January 13, 2009 at 10:14 am
  • fellowweb says:

    Great post!

    In the end, I will probably look for an alternative to Hamachi since their approach to cross-platform availability of the service seems to have gone. I haven’t seen new versions for Mac OS X nor Linux for months/years.

    What solution have you guys eventually decided for?

    February 22, 2009 at 11:00 am
  • dlh says:

    I’ve been using remobo, since I only need a mac and windows connection – it’s been good so far.

    February 25, 2009 at 1:17 pm
  • Frank says:

    I am trying to figure out what is the most secure easy VPN solution to use? I hate the idea that a central server aids the connection between the computers. Does Remobo use a central server, or is it direct peer-to-peer. I am trying to connect 2 computers, my home computer which houses lots of files, and my office computer. I own the business so there are no limitations. I basically want to use one of these VPN solutions to sync folders of data.

    Anyone know which of these solutions allows a direct peer-to-peer connection without the middle man? I know the VPN is supposedly secured and encrypted but I’ve read elsewhere that there is still a middle man, and security is lessened because of this.

    Can someone chime in on what is the best solution for me? 2 computers, to share a folder, that’s it.

    February 25, 2009 at 9:17 pm
  • Andy Barlow says:

    I am looking for a solution to this:

    3 Client Computers with direct peer to peer connectivity. Will Tinc do this job?

    Will all 3 machines (being in seperate places) need 3 fixed IP’s or a dyndns.org domain?

    Definatly looking for opensource app too thats mutliplatform (Windows XP and Linux).

    March 2, 2009 at 11:48 am
  • orenb says:

    Repeating Frank’s request…

    March 8, 2009 at 5:19 pm
  • Per says:

    @Frank
    If you just want to sync files between computers, check out https://sync.live.com/welcome.aspx

    March 20, 2009 at 3:55 pm
  • Frank says:

    I considered live.com, but isn’t there a security issue with live.com in the middle? I want something that is a true peer to peer, without the middle man. Any exist?

    March 25, 2009 at 11:55 pm
  • NOdaddy.com says:

    SocialVPN.com is the way to go

    June 25, 2009 at 11:55 pm
  • Isaac Sloan says:

    Comprehensive List of Zero Config VPN clients. Hamachi Alternatives

    Remobo - Fast, client for Windows, OSX and Linux.
    Leaf - Good client but only for Windows.
    Wippien - Slightly less developed but works with Windows and Linux.
    Social VPN – Open Source, Linux and Windows
    Gbridge - Looks easy enough to use. Only Windows.

    July 10, 2009 at 2:36 pm
    • dlh says:

      Hi Isaac,

      Thanks a lot for the informative reply! I edited it to add links to all the sites for those tools.

      July 13, 2009 at 5:50 pm
  • Crazy Noob says:

    Comprehensive list of 8 VPN’s that can be used as hamachi alternative
    Hamachi Alternative List.. That include brief review of every one as well so do check it out..

    September 6, 2009 at 7:02 am
  • Crazy Noob says:

    These are mostly the ones that have been tested used for gaming, also includes few that are for other stuff like sharing etc but can also be used for gaming.

    September 6, 2009 at 7:04 am
    • dlh says:

      Hey – the link you were trying to post didn’t come through – if you come back can you paste it in? For whatever reason lots of folks show up here looking for info on alternatives to Hamachi. thanks,

      September 8, 2009 at 8:47 am
  • Cristu says:

    hey guys. I would love an hamachi alternative, as fast as hamachi, where you could create a + then 15 (+ then 50 if possible) people network, and they could group talk or separate talk.

    any sugestion?

    December 20, 2009 at 8:17 pm
  • nivS says:

    Cristu, if you are just looking for chatting/text writing among several persons IRC have existed for 20 years or so. You can setup your own server if you like to control who has access etc. A popular client is mIRC.

    January 27, 2010 at 4:33 pm
  • Rain says:

    I think Crazy Noob meant this: http://segmentnext.com/index.php/2009/08/20/hamachi-alternatives-virtual-private-network-adapters/

    February 26, 2010 at 4:04 am
  • db says:

    try teamviewer. not open source, but it is free.

    July 24, 2011 at 9:47 pm
  • GG says:

    Teamviewer is a VNC repeater / alike session and it is not free if not for a very limited usage.
    Ammyy.com is the same.

    Mediation is necessary in most cases where you cannot configure firewalls.

    Any conclusion?

    I also found ntop / n2n which seems ok and easy.

    January 16, 2012 at 11:01 am

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