44Net Connect/Quick Start/Raspberry Pi: Difference between revisions

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The third line, beginning with "Active," should indicate that the unit is active (running).  
The third line, beginning with "Active," should indicate that the unit is active (running).  
If it's not, run <code>systemctl start systemd-resolved<code> to start the unit. This will ensure that the unit is currently running.
If it's not, run <code>systemctl start systemd-resolved</code> to start the unit. This will ensure that the unit is currently running.





Revision as of 17:29, 29 May 2026


What you need

  • A 44Net Portal account
  • A verified amateur radio callsign
  • A Raspberry Pi with a working Raspberry Pi OS installation
  • Some sort of Internet access

If you haven't set up your Portal account or verified your callsign yet, see 44Net: Get Started for instructions.

Install Dependencies

Step 1: Ensure your OS is up to date

Open a terminal and run sudo apt-get update, then sudo apt-get upgrade.

Step 2: Install wireguard and systemd-resolved

Run sudo apt-get install wireguard systemd-resolved, then restart your Raspberry Pi. Restarting is required for systemd-resolved to function.

Step 3: Verify that systemd-resolved is enabled

Run systemctl status systemd-resolved. If the unit is running without issues, there will be a green asterisk or circle at the top left. The second line, beginning with "Loaded," should indicate that the unit is enabled. If it's not, run systemctl enable systemd-resolved to enable the unit. This will ensure that the unit starts automatically when your Raspberry Pi boots from now on.

The third line, beginning with "Active," should indicate that the unit is active (running). If it's not, run systemctl start systemd-resolved to start the unit. This will ensure that the unit is currently running.


Create your Connect tunnel

Step 1: Sign in to 44Net Connect


Step 2: Create your first tunnel

  • On the dashboard page, click the “Create Tunnel” button.

Step 3: Choose region and node

  • In the list of regions, click the region closest to you.
  • Nodes available in that region will appear.
  • Click a node to select it as your endpoint.

You can change endpoints later if needed.

Step 4: Name your tunnel

  • Enter a name for your tunnel (e.g. “Home Laptop” or “Raspberry Pi”)

Step 5: Save your new tunnel

  • Check or uncheck the option to receive tunnel details via email.
  • Click the “Create Tunnel” button.
  • Review the confirmation dialog and click “Save Changes” to proceed.

Configure your WireGuard client

  • Create a new file for your WireGuard configuration in /etc/wireguard/, for example /etc/wireguard/wg0.conf.
  • You can name this file however you want, but this file name will become the name of your WireGuard interface.
  • Paste the configuration text in from 44Net Connect, or if you prefer to use the file that was emailed to you, upload that one.