Hamachi "Version" 2 heißt nun "Log me in".
Letztes Posting vom Entwickler:
"HamachiX, no more updates, August 10th, 2009
HamachiX is discontinued. Logmein does not support the Mac OS X platform natively, the CLI tool is a left-over of the original owner of hamachi, and compensating for its shortcomings has become increasingly difficult.
Therefore support for HamachiX ceases, downloads are still available. "
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Hier kann man lesen, dass es immer noch eine Alternative gibt:
http://community.logmein.com/t5/Hamachi/hamachi-2-for-mac/td-p/30524/page/2
"kyle-f" hat am 03-30-2010 05:45 PM gepostet:
"You fellows should check out Hamachi Sidekick (
https://launchpad.net/hamachi-sidekick), which is a GUI for hamachi that, while still in the beta stages, works fairly well on Mac OS X and Linux. It also gives URLs for downloading Hamachi for Mac, Linux 32-bit, Linux 64-bit, and ARM Linux."
...sowie
"LVWolfman"
am 06-17-2010 05:44 PM:
"I admit that the command line isn't as easy to use as the GUI clients... but also not hard. The only thing you're missing is the point and click to browse interface.
When you type 'hamachi list' from the terminal, you'll get the list you'd see in the GUI. Do a Command-K (finder menu->Go->Connect to server) and type in SMB://x.x.x.x which you can then add to favorites. Now, at times, once I've connected to one computer on the VPN, the others will show up in Network. (Finder menu->Go->Network) but it isn't consistent.
Of course you can use that list from the terminal and enter the IP addresses in a sticky note, text document, whatever. My personal way of doing it is to make entries in my hosts file. There's a great little terminal mode editor named nano that you can use. But if you prefer a more Mac-Like experience, type the following into terminal:
sudo open /Applications/TextEdit.app /etc/hosts
sudo is the command that let's you run root programs from a user account. It will prompt you for your password.
open is the command to launch programs, urls, etc. from the command line
/Applications/TextEdit.app is the full path to the program to launch (including the .app extension, and it is case sensitive)
/etc/hosts is the name of the file to open with TextEdit
The hosts file is a simple little text file. When the computer needs to convert a name to an IP address, it first looks in your hosts file. If the name isn't found, then it queries your Domain Name Servers (DNS) over the network/internet.
So by adding a computer and ip address to your hosts file, you can do all sorts of handy things.
The format is simple... on a line by itself, you add in the ip address then a tab and finally what you want to call the computer. I.e.
5.123.45.123 mywebserveratwork
Save the file and you're done.
Now, if you enter mywebserveratwork into Safari, it'll try to connect to your webserver over your Hamachi VPN. If you enter smb://mywebserveratwork into the "go to server", you'll get a list of shares on that computer... etc.
(...)"
Also erst Überreste laden:
http://files.hamachi.cc/osx/
...dann loslegen - Z.B. wie beschrieben.