-----Original Message-----
From: users-boun...@lists.fedoraproject.org 
[mailto:users-boun...@lists.fedoraproject.org] On Behalf Of Marko Vojinovic
Sent: vrijdag 14 oktober 2011 13:26
To: Community support for Fedora users
Subject: Re: Remote access

On Friday 14 October 2011 05:32:23 Scott Rouse wrote:
> On Oct 14, 2011 12:13 AM, "KC8LDO" <kc8...@arrl.net> wrote:
> > Is there a way to use ssh to get through a firewall for remote 
> > access to a system? The situation I'm looking at is a Fedora system 
> > sitting behind a company firewall, which I have no control over, 
> > that I wish to gain access to by logging into it over the Internet from a 
> > remote computer.
> > In other words the connection is initiated from outside of the 
> > firewalled company network.
> 
> There are many companies that would frown upon doing what you are 
> proposing.  I would suggest that you talk to your network/firewall 
> admin and see if they will make an allowance for you.

True, and that is usually the best option. The drawback being that you are 
putting yourself at mercy of the firewall admin, who might be lazy, 
incompetent, or ignorant (which is sometimes the case), or have a boss that is 
one of those things (which is the case quite often).

However, every serious firewall admin should know that the firewall is a 
one-way barrier, protecting local users from the outside attack, and having in 
principle no way to protect the outside world from the local user. Or in the 
words of the firewall-piercing HOWTO ( http://tldp.org/HOWTO/Firewall-Piercing 
):

<quote>
A firewall cannot protect a network against its own internal users, and should 
not even try to.
</quote>

So, if the OP asks his admin to allow him the access, and is refused, I think 
it is perfectly legitimate to DIY and pierce a connection through.

Best, :-)
Marko


Hi some remarks to make...

Firstly, if you have a good defined and well maitained firewall, it's hard to 
get _IN_.
One way of dealing with the problem, is installing at work (if you can) an 
openvpn connection towards home.
Even if the company firewall very strict, they will stil allow port 80/443 
going out.
On those ports, you can do an openvpn-proxy. Examples on the openvpn site.

OTOH. If you ask and were declined, or don't ask and they find out later, this 
is for most companies enough reason fon instantly been throwed out.
And perhaps get a law suit against you.

So i would _strongly_ suggest asking your sysadmin / networkadmin / 
securityadmin to open-up a port for allowing incoming VPN's.
If it is for doing work from home location, they probably don't object.

Better safe then sorry (and fired)

Hans

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