Hello:)
I need to know if Stunnel is going to accomplish what i need to do. My home ISP blocks protocol HTTP and SSH from coming in so that people cant run their own website from home without paying the ISP for a "Business" line
All i am trying to do is have a SFTP server that i can access my dang files from while i am at school, work, friends house, library or wherever. I have tried ssh on multiple random ports and made sure all firewall rules and port forward rules were correct in my home router. I know they work because i even went as far as setting up a minecraft server to just test the port forward rules out and sure enough, my friend 200 miles away can connect just fine to my home minecraft server.. But he can not connect to the ssh server. No logs are ever created on the server either because something is stoping the packet from even hitting my router, that something is my ISP
Would stunnel allow me to make ssh traffic look like regular https traffic, thus allowing me to connect to my server at home so i can do my homework??
thanks
Matt,
On 12/11/19 17:53, Matt Thomas wrote:
I need to know if Stunnel is going to accomplish what i need to do. My home ISP blocks protocol HTTP and SSH from coming in so that people cant run their own website from home without paying the ISP for a "Business" line
All i am trying to do is have a SFTP server that i can access my dang files from while i am at school, work, friends house, library or wherever. I have tried ssh on multiple random ports and made sure all firewall rules and port forward rules were correct in my home router. I know they work because i even went as far as setting up a minecraft server to just test the port forward rules out and sure enough, my friend 200 miles away can connect just fine to my home minecraft server.. But he can not connect to the ssh server. No logs are ever created on the server either because something is stoping the packet from even hitting my router, that something is my ISP
Would stunnel allow me to make ssh traffic look like regular https traffic, thus allowing me to connect to my server at home so i can do my homework??
Those other servers probably use TLS or plaintext connections. stunnel uses TLS, but ssh/sftp use a slightly different protocol that may possibly be distinguishable by a determined ISP.
I would think that using stunnel to tunnel SFTP/SSH would be possible, though not strictly necessary. I suspect some other problem is preventing you from succeeding.
Can you be more specific about exactly what you did for configuration? Port numbers, specific things you did, etc? You don't have to disclose your public IP address, but perhaps give the local IPs of your router and home server, etc?
-chris
On 12/11/2019 5:53 PM, Matt Thomas wrote:
Hello:)
[snip
All i am trying to do is have a SFTP server that i can access my dang files from while i am at school, work, friends house, library or wherever. [snip]
I run a ssh server on my home network.
I configure it to use a port other than port 22.