48 lines
1.7 KiB
Markdown
48 lines
1.7 KiB
Markdown
<!--# set var="title" value="SSH Tunnelling 101" -->
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<!--# set var="date" value="2006-01-23" -->
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<!--# include file="include/top.html" -->
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## The Players
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I’ll be referring to 3 hosts:
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* A: The server; this machine is behind a firewall that allows outgoing connections but doesn’t allow incoming.
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* B: The bounce host; this machine is unfirewalled.
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* C: The client.
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## Configuring B
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Some sshd configuration needs to be done on B before any of this will work. In the sshd\_config file (/etc/ssh/sshd\_config on Debian):
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AllowTcpForwarding yes
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GatewayPorts yes
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Remember to restart sshd after making changes (/etc/init.d/ssh restart).
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## Building the Tunnel
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On A, run:
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ssh -g -n -R <port on B>:127.0.0.1:<port on A> <address of B> sleep 999999
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This will hang with no output; that’s the expected result.
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You should now be able to connect to the port on B and be talking to A. To get this to restart if the connection dies, run it inside:
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while :; do <command>; done
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As with all shell commands, put a “&” on the end to run it in the background.
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## Tunnelling FTP
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Due to a trick in the FTP protocol, you can use this tunnelling arrangement but have FTP data connections go directly from A to C, without touching B. This only works with so-called “active” FTP (using the PORT command instead of PASV). C must also be unfirewalled for this to work.
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The only thing you’ll need to change is the FTP server configuration. In proftpd.conf, add:
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AllowForeignAddress on
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For pure-ftpd, run it with the “-w” commandline flag, or with a file named “AllowUserFXP” and a contents of “on” if you’re using pure-ftpd-wrapper.
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<!--# include file="include/bottom.html" -->
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