Instead of configuring multiple containers to use a VPN, we can setup a VPN container and route the other containers traffic through this container. This post will outline how to do that with [dperson's OpenVPN Container](https://github.com/dperson/openvpn-client).
I'm a huge fan of docker-compose, so here we go:
```yaml
version: "3.3"
services:
openvpn-client:
image: dperson/openvpn-client
cap_add:
- net_admin
security_opt:
- label:disable
container_name: openvpn-client
hostname: openvpn-client
environment:
- PUID=1000
- PGID=1000
volumes:
- /dev/net:/dev/net:z
- /volumes/openvpn-client/vpn/:/vpn
restart: always
```
The `net_admin` capability according to the documentation "perform various network-related operations". This would make sense since an additional network interface is configured for a VPN connection. The `label:disable` definition is to disable label confinement.
In this setup, you will need to put the `.ovpn` profile that you wish to connect to under the `/volumes/openvpn-client/vpn/` directory.
## (Optional) Username/Password Setup
In the event you need a username and password to connect, create a file called `pass.txt` in the same directory as your ovpn profile. The file `pass.txt` will contain the username in the first line and the password in the second line. Then in your ovpn profile make sure you have a line that says `auth-user-pass pass.txt`.
Let's say your ISP throttles torrent connections and you want to route your `qBittorrent` container so that you can download Linux distributions faster. Here's how you can define it in the docker-compose file.
Sadly as of the time of writing, routing a container's traffic makes it lose its ability to belong to a network. I knocked into this when I tried accessing the qBittorrent API. So for the sake of example, if you want to connect to qbittorrent, you need to route the traffic to the openvpn-client container at port 8000 which we specified earlier to be the webui port of qbittorrent.