Connect guest to internet - corporate proxy





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I am trying to connect guest Arch Linux to internet, my host OS is Win 10. This solution does not work, so I came up to conclusion that it may be caused by corporate proxy. Neither NAT, Bridge, Host-only work. How to connect guest to access internet, that is available on host. If I connect to not corporate network, internet can be accessed both on host and guest using NAT.










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  • 1





    If guest VM can access Inet using NAT in network A and cannot in network B, it is possible that the router in network B is set for to check and forbid secondary routing. There is a lot of methods to do this. For example, it can drop packets with TTL values not in (2^n)-1... I'd recommend to ask your network administrator about Inet access restrictions first.

    – Akina
    Jan 29 at 8:42


















0















I am trying to connect guest Arch Linux to internet, my host OS is Win 10. This solution does not work, so I came up to conclusion that it may be caused by corporate proxy. Neither NAT, Bridge, Host-only work. How to connect guest to access internet, that is available on host. If I connect to not corporate network, internet can be accessed both on host and guest using NAT.










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    If guest VM can access Inet using NAT in network A and cannot in network B, it is possible that the router in network B is set for to check and forbid secondary routing. There is a lot of methods to do this. For example, it can drop packets with TTL values not in (2^n)-1... I'd recommend to ask your network administrator about Inet access restrictions first.

    – Akina
    Jan 29 at 8:42














0












0








0








I am trying to connect guest Arch Linux to internet, my host OS is Win 10. This solution does not work, so I came up to conclusion that it may be caused by corporate proxy. Neither NAT, Bridge, Host-only work. How to connect guest to access internet, that is available on host. If I connect to not corporate network, internet can be accessed both on host and guest using NAT.










share|improve this question














I am trying to connect guest Arch Linux to internet, my host OS is Win 10. This solution does not work, so I came up to conclusion that it may be caused by corporate proxy. Neither NAT, Bridge, Host-only work. How to connect guest to access internet, that is available on host. If I connect to not corporate network, internet can be accessed both on host and guest using NAT.







networking virtualbox arch-linux






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asked Jan 29 at 7:53









BartekBartek

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1012








  • 1





    If guest VM can access Inet using NAT in network A and cannot in network B, it is possible that the router in network B is set for to check and forbid secondary routing. There is a lot of methods to do this. For example, it can drop packets with TTL values not in (2^n)-1... I'd recommend to ask your network administrator about Inet access restrictions first.

    – Akina
    Jan 29 at 8:42














  • 1





    If guest VM can access Inet using NAT in network A and cannot in network B, it is possible that the router in network B is set for to check and forbid secondary routing. There is a lot of methods to do this. For example, it can drop packets with TTL values not in (2^n)-1... I'd recommend to ask your network administrator about Inet access restrictions first.

    – Akina
    Jan 29 at 8:42








1




1





If guest VM can access Inet using NAT in network A and cannot in network B, it is possible that the router in network B is set for to check and forbid secondary routing. There is a lot of methods to do this. For example, it can drop packets with TTL values not in (2^n)-1... I'd recommend to ask your network administrator about Inet access restrictions first.

– Akina
Jan 29 at 8:42





If guest VM can access Inet using NAT in network A and cannot in network B, it is possible that the router in network B is set for to check and forbid secondary routing. There is a lot of methods to do this. For example, it can drop packets with TTL values not in (2^n)-1... I'd recommend to ask your network administrator about Inet access restrictions first.

– Akina
Jan 29 at 8:42










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