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Special Forums IP Networking Setting to SSH home-PC from Work Post 302573170 by Corona688 on Sunday 13th of November 2011 11:15:56 AM
Old 11-13-2011
192.168.x.x addresses are internal addresses, trying to SSH to one of those from somewhere else over the internet is like sending a package to an apartment number without telling the postal service which apartment where.

You have to ssh to the router IP.

You have to tell the router to forward port 23 22 to 192.168.1.103.

How to do that depends on the router.

Last edited by Corona688; 11-13-2011 at 12:27 PM.. Reason: wrong port
 

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BOOTPARAMD(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					     BOOTPARAMD(8)

NAME
bootparamd -- boot parameter server SYNOPSIS
bootparamd [-ds] [-r router] [-f file] DESCRIPTION
The bootparamd utility is a server process that provides information to diskless(8) clients necessary for booting. It consults the /etc/bootparams file. This version will allow the use of aliases on the hostname in the /etc/bootparams file. The returned hostname to the whoami request done by the booting client will be the name that appears in /etc/bootparams and not the canonical name. In this way you can keep the answer short enough so that machines that cannot handle long hostnames will not fail during boot. OPTIONS
-d Display the debugging information. -s Log the debugging information with syslog(3). -r router The default router (a machine or an IP-address). This defaults to the machine running the server. -f file The file to use as boot parameter file instead of /etc/bootparams. FILES
/etc/bootparams default boot parameter file EXAMPLES
When netbooting diskless SunOS/Xkernel SPARCstations the booted SunOS kernel also broadcasts to the all-0 address. The SunOS kernel hangs until it receives a reply. To accommodate this behaviour add an alias address that responds to an all-0 broadcast. So, add something like 'ifconfig xl0 192.168.200.254 netmask 255.255.255.255 broadcast 192.168.200.0 alias' on the relevant network interface on your bootparamd server. The alias address must of course be free for use. SEE ALSO
syslog(3), bootparams(5), diskless(8) AUTHORS
Written by Klas Heggemann <klas@nada.kth.se>. BUGS
You may find the syslog(3) loggings to be verbose. BSD
December 14, 2000 BSD
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