Difference between revisions of "SSH"
(→Tunneling between any two ports) |
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In short: |
In short: |
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ssh -D 9999 username@ip-address-of-ssh-server |
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Then set in Firefox to use a SOCKS proxy: “localhost", port 9999 |
# Then set in Firefox to use a SOCKS proxy: “localhost", port 9999 |
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Say, you want to read a remote server web page, but there is only ssh port open on the server. If you have a valid user account to the server, then you can create a tunnel, like this: |
Say, you want to read a remote server web page, but there is only ssh port open on the server. If you have a valid user account to the server, then you can create a tunnel, like this: |
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ssh -f user@server.com -L 8080:server.com:80 -N |
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Now you can enter the following in your browser: http://server.com:8080 |
Now you can enter the following in your browser: http://server.com:8080 |
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Or in general, -f means sit in background and -N menas do not execute any command: |
Or in general, -f means sit in background and -N menas do not execute any command: |
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ssh -f user@server.com -L my-local-port:server.com:server-port -N |
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== Removing a key from the known hosts file == |
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Note, you may run this for the hostname of the "old" computer and for the IP address. |
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ssh-keygen -R hostname |
Revision as of 22:12, 27 April 2012
Tunneling to socks proxy
From here: ssh-tunnel-socks-proxy
In short:
ssh -D 9999 username@ip-address-of-ssh-server # Then set in Firefox to use a SOCKS proxy: “localhost", port 9999
Tunneling between any two ports
Say, you want to read a remote server web page, but there is only ssh port open on the server. If you have a valid user account to the server, then you can create a tunnel, like this:
ssh -f user@server.com -L 8080:server.com:80 -N
Now you can enter the following in your browser: http://server.com:8080
Or in general, -f means sit in background and -N menas do not execute any command:
ssh -f user@server.com -L my-local-port:server.com:server-port -N
Removing a key from the known hosts file
Note, you may run this for the hostname of the "old" computer and for the IP address.
ssh-keygen -R hostname