[kwlug-disc] Is there a way that I can https Proxy into my lan's http pages?

Colin K colin at void11.com
Tue Sep 13 22:01:54 EDT 2011


Thanks for your time and attention to this I appreciate the wonderful
support you bring to the table.

On Tue, Sep 13, 2011 at 9:08 PM, Raul Suarez <rarsa at yahoo.com> wrote:

> Besides, you can carry Putty in your pocket in a USB key so there is
> nothing to install
>
> Raul Suarez
>
> Technology consultant
> Software, Hardware and Practices
> _________________
> Twitter: rarsamx
> http://rarsa.blogspot.com/
> An eclectic collection of random thoughts
> ------------------------------
> *From:* John Van Ostrand <john at netdirect.ca>
> *To:* KWLUG discussion <kwlug-disc at kwlug.org>
> *Sent:* Tuesday, September 13, 2011 5:16:33 PM
> *Subject:* Re: [kwlug-disc] Is there a way that I can https Proxy into my
> lan's http pages?
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> > I want to be able to access my home lan from abroad without any
> > special tools and have more than one web gui that I would like to
> > access but I want to make sure that I'm not relying on their security
> > only their usefulness.
>
> It's the "without special tools" that is the challenge here.
>
> Typically when one wants remote access to more than one service on a
> network the solution is to use a universal solution instead of one that just
> works for the few cases. Almost certainly people find other things they want
> to connect to and eventually they end up with a VPN.
>
> So here are what might be the best options to date.
>
> SSH tunneling. This requires an SSH client but fortunately they are
> installed by default on Linux. Putty is the SSH tool for Windows. This is
> one of the limited options, but it can be useful. The idea is that you only
> expose SSH to the Internet. SSH allows TCP tunnels so you can access any
> service on your network that uses TCP (like web servers.) Putty and Linux's
> SSH have the same command line. So if you do this:
>
>     ssh -L 8080:hostname:80 myserver.dyndns.org -l username
>
> After logging into "username" to your ssh server, you can point your
> browser to http://localhost:8080 and it will tunnel you through to the web
> server on "hostname".
>
> You can also do multiple by adding additional -L arguments:
>
>     ssh -L 8080:hostname:80 -L 8081:otherhost:80 myserver.dyndns.org -l
> username
>
> The above command connects to hostname and otherhost. Note that I had to
> use 8081 as the local port so it would not conflict with the first tunnel.
> Again open a browser ant point it to http://localhost:8080 or
> http://localhost:8081 and you'll get your home servers.
>
> This has some security issues that can be mitigated so if you chose this
> make sure you ask about securing it.
>
> The full-strength option is a VPN. There are several choices here including
> ones that work well with Windows (like PPTP) and ones that require add-on
> software (openVPN) but work with anything.
>
>
> --
> John Van Ostrand
> CTO, co-CEO
> Net Direct Inc.
> 564 Weber St. N. Unit 12, Waterloo, ON N2L 5C6
> Ph: 866-883-1172 x5102
> Fx: 519-883-8533
>
> Linux Solutions / IBM Hardware
>
>
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