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| comp.security.ssh SSH secure remote login and tunneling tools. |
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Hébergeur: |
I have 2 Windows XP systems in different locations (different subnets,
different ISPs, etc.). They get their IPs via ISP-supplied DHCP. System A has the disk resources I want to use from System B. I want to tunnel SMB over SSH because System A has an ISP that blocks SMB (natively port 445, but will try NetBT [139] if that fails). Thus, I cannot access shared directories natively. I have done tons of research on the project, and tried many solutions. The problem I am running into is that all of the documentation on the web is either just plain wrong, or does not work, or documented for UNIX systems, which evidently does not translate over to the Windows XP world. I have set up a virtual system locally to test things, and cannot for the life of me get SMB over SSH to work. I can tunnel telnet just fine. But not SMB. Here is what I have tried so far: 1. BOTH systems are running Windows XP SP2 with current hotfixes and the firewall turned OFF. The 2 test systems are on the same subnet, and SMB communication over port 445 works dandy. 2. I installed CopSSH (tried newest current version and newest preview version) on System A. I enabled one account to use SSH, and can successfully putty to System A from System B. Works fine. 3. On System B, using the newest version of putty, I have created a tunnel for telnet. Relevent settings are under Connection/SSH/Tunnels, and I use the values of 20000 (local listening port for 127.0.0.1) and 192.168.1.99:23 for the destination. Telnetting to 127.0.0.1 on port 20000 works fine. 4. On system B, I installed a loopback NIC, as described on various web pages. It uses the settings of 10.0.0.1/255.255.255.0, with the gateway of my primary NIC (192.168.1.1). I have disabled EVERYTHING except TCP/IP on this NIC (no SMB, not NetBT, etc.). Again, only the TCP/IP checkbox is checked for this NIC. This has to be done because SSH cannot forward a port if that port is in use,and port 445 is used on my 192.168.1.x NIC. Thus, I have to use the 10.0.0.1 NIC for forwarding port 445. I have installed KB884020, which addresses loopback issues. 5. On system B, I configured the SMB tunnel in putty like so: 10.0.0.1:445 local listening port and 192.168.1.99:445 for the destination. Putty connects just fine, but the tunnel does NOT work. I cannot access any resources from System B using \\10.0.0.1. Now, I have installed WireShark on System A and sniffed the wire during SMB communication attempts. I see the putty traffic just fine as I create the tunel. However, no port 445 traffic seems to be getting redirected to System A when I try to access \\10.0.0.1 resources. No traffic at all, actually. There are no incoming or outgoing packets. This tells me the issue is with System B,that the tunnel is not working, most likely the putty configuration. However, I have tried everything I know to try, and have failed to get this to work. Can someone out there who has successfully tunnelled SMB over SSH on a Windows system (preferably XP) please me out? Please note that you need to edit my email by replace "nospam" with "verizon". Thanks! Please replace the "NoSpam" with "Verizon" in my email address in order to reply. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Joe Granto Joe.Granto@NoSpam.Com Senior Engineer Intel Engineering,Verizon |
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#2 |
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Messages: n/a
Hébergeur: |
did you see this article?
http://research.lumeta.com/ches/chea...lsolution.html Joe Granto wrote: > I have 2 Windows XP systems in different locations (different subnets, > different ISPs, etc.). They get their IPs via ISP-supplied DHCP. > System A has the disk resources I want to use from System B. > > I want to tunnel SMB over SSH because System A has an ISP that blocks > SMB (natively port 445, but will try NetBT [139] if that fails). Thus, > I cannot access shared directories natively. > > I have done tons of research on the project, and tried many solutions. > The problem I am running into is that all of the documentation on the > web is either just plain wrong, or does not work, or documented for > UNIX systems, which evidently does not translate over to the Windows > XP world. > > I have set up a virtual system locally to test things, and cannot for > the life of me get SMB over SSH to work. I can tunnel telnet just > fine. But not SMB. Here is what I have tried so far: > > 1. BOTH systems are running Windows XP SP2 with current hotfixes and > the firewall turned OFF. The 2 test systems are on the same subnet, > and SMB communication over port 445 works dandy. > > 2. I installed CopSSH (tried newest current version and newest preview > version) on System A. I enabled one account to use SSH, and can > successfully putty to System A from System B. Works fine. > > 3. On System B, using the newest version of putty, I have created a > tunnel for telnet. Relevent settings are under Connection/SSH/Tunnels, > and I use the values of 20000 (local listening port for 127.0.0.1) and > 192.168.1.99:23 for the destination. Telnetting to 127.0.0.1 on port > 20000 works fine. > > 4. On system B, I installed a loopback NIC, as described on various > web pages. It uses the settings of 10.0.0.1/255.255.255.0, with the > gateway of my primary NIC (192.168.1.1). I have disabled EVERYTHING > except TCP/IP on this NIC (no SMB, not NetBT, etc.). Again, only the > TCP/IP checkbox is checked for this NIC. This has to be done because > SSH cannot forward a port if that port is in use,and port 445 is used > on my 192.168.1.x NIC. Thus, I have to use the 10.0.0.1 NIC for > forwarding port 445. I have installed KB884020, which addresses > loopback issues. > > 5. On system B, I configured the SMB tunnel in putty like so: > 10.0.0.1:445 local listening port and 192.168.1.99:445 for the > destination. Putty connects just fine, but the tunnel does NOT work. I > cannot access any resources from System B using \\10.0.0.1. > > Now, I have installed WireShark on System A and sniffed the wire > during SMB communication attempts. I see the putty traffic just fine > as I create the tunel. However, no port 445 traffic seems to be > getting redirected to System A when I try to access \\10.0.0.1 > resources. No traffic at all, actually. There are no incoming or > outgoing packets. > > This tells me the issue is with System B,that the tunnel is not > working, most likely the putty configuration. However, I have tried > everything I know to try, and have failed to get this to work. Can > someone out there who has successfully tunnelled SMB over SSH on a > Windows system (preferably XP) please me out? Please note that > you need to edit my email by replace "nospam" with "verizon". > > Thanks! > Please replace the "NoSpam" with "Verizon" in my email address in order > to reply. > ------------------------------------------------------------------------- > Joe Granto Joe.Granto@NoSpam.Com > Senior Engineer Intel Engineering,Verizon -- try a random act of kindness today -- you just might surprise even yourself ![]() |
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