Lewandowsky, Matt
2001-Mar-13 22:35 UTC
ssh through proxy (was: prng_cmds/init_rng() question/patch)
(Sorry for being so OT, but I'm currently experiencing this inconvenience and want to be more productive than doing a CVS update at home and getting to the office.) So, what you are suggesting is that I setup a squid proxy on a box outside the firewall on port 80 and use MindTerm to connect via that? Until this past weekend when the network was "redone", we had a proxy we could access internally and this is how I got out before. But now, we have a "direct connection" which I had no say in... Oh, well... If that isn't what you were suggesting, could you elaborate? Thanks, --Matt> -----Original Message----- > From: Mats Andersson [mailto:mats at mindbright.se] > Sent: Tuesday, March 13, 2001 12:30 AM > To: Lewandowsky, Matt > Cc: 'Gert Doering'; J.S.Peatfield at damtp.cam.ac.uk; dwd at bell-labs.com; > openssh-unix-dev at mindrot.org > Subject: ssh through proxy (was: prng_cmds/init_rng() question/patch) > > > > Hi, > > Sorry for pushing this even further off topic but since > someone mentioned > MindTerm I couldn't resist answering :-) > > On Mon, 12 Mar 2001, Lewandowsky, Matt wrote: > > Is there anything like this atm which uses the web server > as a proxy? For > > example, say that I'm behind a firewall at work, and the > "security policy" > > disallows ssh. > > MindTerm (and I'm sure other clients too) have the feature to connect > "out" through either a http proxy or a socks4/5 proxy. The case you > describe probably includes a http proxy to pass out through > (which most > often IS allowed by policies...) in which case you in most > cases is able > to "fool" the http proxy in letting you out through https > (often meaning > that you have to put your sshd listening on 443 on the other end). > > Cheers, > > /Mats >