I normally use a private ip address (with a custom port number) to SSH connect to my server for a remote development. Although I mostly use a private ip address, the port is forwarded properly and I am able to SSH in to the server with the public ip address.
(tested with mobile network hotspot)
Now I am in the local library using the their internet (with my laptop), the connection gets refused and even fails the simple ping test.
Would this be because the library's network is blocking such connection for the security purposes? If so, is there anything that I could do? Or should I just use a mobile hotspot?
I have a raspi machine behind NAT in my room, and I want to access it from the interenet using the URL.I found this article.
https://developers.cloudflare.com/cloudflare-one/tutorials/ssh
However, it required me to run the cloudflared program on the connecting client. I understand that this is for the security purpose. Does it possible to make the connect without running the cloudflared program on the client machine.
A follow-up question would be is it possible to ssh into ipv6 machine that using the same technique.
There are various options when it comes to connecting to a machine running on a private network:
Running cloudflared on the client (which you already found)
Installing the WARP client on the user side, then using cloudflared on the server side to expose the service securely. Finally, route the network traffic for the private network on the tunnel via WARP. This approach is described in a tutorial here
Cloudflare started also supporting in browser rendering of an SSH session. I have wrote a tutorial describing how to set it up here.
Approach (3) would do away with the need of running a client since it relies on a simple browser.
I have a machine that I want to setup an SFTP connection to. The SSH server is running properly, I can ssh into it from my client computer, and I can SFTP in from my smartphone. I'm just a bit confused on how to properly configure the ~/.netrc file. The server computer is running Ubuntu, the client computer is running OSX.
Here are my main requirements for what I'm trying to configure:
Alias. I don't have a DNS name for the computer I'm connecting to, just the IP address. ~/.ssh/config is great because it basically assigns aliases to connections, and then specifies the hostname, port, etc. Looking at the man page for ~/.netrc, I don't see a way to do this.
Private Key. This SFTP connection is validated using a private key. I don't see anything in the ~/.netrc man page about how to specify the key.
If ~/.netrc is the wrong way to go, what alternatives would be better?
I am trying to follow this tutorial. To train the Mahout engine they mention to use the command:
http://localhost:8080/kornakapi/train?recommender=itembased
This works. However I want to open up the server so that I can run this remotely. The code is running on a server at a specified IP address, let's call it 999.999.9.999. When I try
http://999.999.9.999/kornakapi/train?recommender=itembased
I get a 404 error. Obviously the server isn't setup to accept incoming connections (though phpMyAdmin works remotely). How can I setup the server to allow an external connection in this manner?
You need to configure your gateway to accept incoming requests. Access your modem and search for a setting that allows one computer on your LAN to open up all its ports. You have to enter in the computer's local IP
I want to make my site available world wide. Im using xampp server for hosting. I have no access to any kind of servers and modems. Situation is shown below:
My site server has local ip assigned by wifi router and it runs Windows 8.
Remember I have no access on any kind of servers and modems so port port-forwarding is impossible (out of my scope).
Its actually difficult, but not impossible.
One way, I would approach this is:
I would host a page on internet.
Then take request and store it in database.
One of my program will always be running from my computer.
Then check for request and curl the request to localhost. For this you may use Node.js (taking data from database using GET method and curl it to localhost).
This is the best I could think of. And I am working on it, when the code is ready I'll make it open source and notify you :)
But still, it's difficult, as you need to put user's request to sleep for 2 seconds and then transferring it.
Its slow, but may work out for you.
Disadvantages:
Program will be very slow and memory usage will be more.
Breaking may happen many times.
High bandwidth wastage
If not encrypted, MIM (Men in Middle) may possible.
Advantages:
Indirect method of hosting
Need not to worry about your code being lost.
I am looking forward for a better alternative and I would like to keep this question for bounty once again.
If you cannot open the necessary ports within your LAN you will require access to an external server. However, the external server does not need to host any code, e.g.
Create a Linux based ec2 instance using Amazon's free tier.
Install a package to redirect remote to local ports:
a. using socat:
Install socat using your distributions package manager
Connect via SSH: ssh -N -R 42500:127.0.0.1:80 -o ServerAliveInterval=60 ubuntu#xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx -N -R 8080:localhost:80 "socat TCP-LISTEN:8080,fork TCP:127.0.0.1:42500"
b. using a webserver and reverse proxy:
Install apache or nginx and any required reverse proxy modules and configure your VirtualHost to proxy requests to a local port, e.g. :8080 -> 127.0.0.1:42500
Connect via SSH: ssh -N -R 42500:127.0.0.1:80 -o ServerAliveInterval=60 ubuntu#xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
Your machine is now reachable via the ec2 instance http://xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:8080/.
I occasionally use this technique when debugging web service callbacks.
Update 17-02-2014
If you are a Windows user you will need to install a third-party tool to support ssh. Options include:
cygwin
git bash
PuTTY
PuTTY is the easiest choice if you are not familiar with *nix tools. To configure remote port forwarding in PuTTY expand the following setting: Connection -> SSH -> Tunnels. Given the previously described scenario, populate Source port as 42500, Desination as 127.0.0.1:80 and tick the Remote option. (You may also need to add the path to a PuTTY compatible private key in the Connection -> SSH -> Auth tab depending on your server configuration.
To test you have successfully forwarded a port, execute the command netstat -lnt on your server. You will see output similar to:
tcp 0 0 127.0.0.1:42500 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN
Finally you can test with curl http://127.0.0.1:42500. You will see the output of your own machines web root running on port 80.
if you don't have a public IP address and cannot use port forwarding it is impossible to host the site
As people have said you need a public IP address. However, even if you did you should not use xampp as a public server, as it is designed for development and therefore has some security settings disabled.
I would recommend buying some shared web hosting, and uploading it to that. (you can get cheap hosting if you google 'shared web hosting', plus free .tk domains are avaliable: http://www.dot.tk/)
Do your company has any vpn network?
If it does and you have access to the vpn network, you can include your server to the vpn network and your guest will only need to login to your company vpn network then access your site like in a local network without using port forwarding. And since your data is very confidential, I assume that using vpn will also help to increase the security of your data.
Please correct me if I'm wrong.
Thank You.
What you are asking is not possible without port forwarding.
Lets break it into steps.
To host your site locally you will need a IP that is static so that
users can access it specifically.
You will need a domain so that it can be converted into user friendly name.
A 24x7 Internet Connection is must! You added a Wifi Router in your Diagram and most of today's router are capable of port forwarding.
What i will do in your scenario is:
Instead of using XAMP, i will install WAMP because i am more familiar with it and easy to configure.(totally personal preference)
Then i would set my server "ONLINE".(Google how to set WAMP server online)
Forward port "80" from router settings to my local computer ip address.(mostly it is tagged as "Virtual Server","Firewall","Port Forwarding",etc vary router to router in settings)
Suppose you have a local ip "192.168.1.3" and global/router IP "254.232.123.232" then you would redirect all the HTTP request done towards router to your local IP.
[[[[254.232.123.232]]]] --+ :80 +-- --------->192.168.1.3
That is good for now, but then you will need to tackle dynamic IP problem of router. But don't worry, thanks to some free sites that will be easy!
Go to no-ip.org -> Setup Account -> and create a entry, just a subdomain for now to test whether everything is working fine.(subdomain like mysite.no-ip.org, later purchase a real Domain)
Input your IP address there(Router IP) and download its application which will automatically update their server if your local IP changes.
Wait for some minutes and Voila! Your site is live.