Hi,
I would check to forward port 445. XP tries this one before 139 and
friends.
Are you sure that your remote Samba listen on 127.0.0.1 ?
Show us your smb.conf
Charles
On 5 mars 07, at 07:47, Richard D. Morey wrote:
> After having scoured the net for a way to do SMB over SSH with
> Windows,
> I've tried everything I have found and I still can't get it to
work.
>
> I'm using Windows Vista as the client and FC6 with Samba 3.0.24-1
> as the
> server. I have set up a share and can successfully connect to that
> share
> with no ssh tunnel.
>
> I would like to tunnel SMB over SSH, so here is what I have tried:
>
> 1. Disabling Windows File Sharing with "net stop server". Then,
using
> puTTY, I connect with my ports forwarded. I forward 80 and 139.
> "http://127.0.0.1" yields my web server's start page, so I
know
> forwarding is working. When I "telnet 127.0.0.1 139" it connects
to
> the
> SMB server successfully. "netstat -ano" reveals that 127.0.0.1:80
and
> 127.0.0.1:139 are listening with puTTY.
>
> However, trying to map a network drive fails. \\127.0.0.1\share yields
> the error "The specified network name is no longer available." or
> "Network path not found." I know the share is working because I
can
> access it without SSH at the same time.
>
> Here are two lines from netstat when I have the telnet session open:
> tcp 0 0 127.0.0.1:45535 127.0.0.1:139
> ESTABLISHED
> tcp 0 0 127.0.0.1:139 127.0.0.1:45535
> ESTABLISHED
>
>
> 2. I have tried adding the loopback device as detailed all over the
> web
> (ie http://www.blisstonia.com/eolson/notes/smboverssh.php ,
> http://www.cheswick.com/ches/cheap/tunnelprob.html)
> When I do this, I can access the webserver via the loopback device but
> "telnet 10.0.0.1 139" times out. However, puTTY appears to be
> listening
> on 10.0.0.1:80 and 10.0.0.1:139. I cannot add the share either. I
> have done everything I can think of to get this to work.
>
> In addition, I have disabled Windows listening on port 445 (as
> suggested in one of the guides) I have tried giving puTTY the
> actually IP of the samba server as the destination, I have ensured
> that 127. is allowed by the smb.conf...
>
> What could be going wrong here? Any ideas?
>
>
> Thanks,
> Richard
>
> --
> Richard D. Morey, M.A.
> Research Assistant, Perception and Cognition Lab
> University of Missouri-Columbia
>
>
> --
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--
Charles Bueche <charles@bueche.ch>
sand, snow, wave, wind and net -surfer
A-Cat SUI 192