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Full Discussion: RDP over SSH Tunnel
Special Forums Cybersecurity RDP over SSH Tunnel Post 302717187 by DGPickett on Wednesday 17th of October 2012 04:08:02 PM
Old 10-17-2012
You can do a tunnel on ssh as a port forwarder, where it listens somewhere for the RDP client tcp connection and forwards it to the target desktop port 3389 (or whatever port you reconfigure to. For instance you can ssh localhost on a firewall host and make tcp port 3389 listen there and forward connections to the windows box port 3389.

If the ssh encryption is not a concern, there is a program tcpRelay.c that can listen of be an inetd child and forward to any given port, even allowing configuration of specific host access permissions and different destinations, as a general firewall tcp proxy.
 

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SSH-KEYSIGN(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					    SSH-KEYSIGN(8)

NAME
ssh-keysign -- ssh helper program for host-based authentication SYNOPSIS
ssh-keysign DESCRIPTION
ssh-keysign is used by ssh(1) to access the local host keys and generate the digital signature required during host-based authentication with SSH protocol version 2. ssh-keysign is disabled by default and can only be enabled in the global client configuration file /etc/ssh/ssh_config by setting EnableSSHKeysign to ``yes''. ssh-keysign is not intended to be invoked by the user, but from ssh(1). See ssh(1) and sshd(8) for more information about host-based authen- tication. FILES
/etc/ssh/ssh_config Controls whether ssh-keysign is enabled. /etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key, /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key These files contain the private parts of the host keys used to generate the digital signature. They should be owned by root, read- able only by root, and not accessible to others. Since they are readable only by root, ssh-keysign must be set-uid root if host- based authentication is used. SEE ALSO
ssh(1), ssh-keygen(1), ssh_config(5), sshd(8) HISTORY
ssh-keysign first appeared in OpenBSD 3.2. AUTHORS
Markus Friedl <markus@openbsd.org> BSD
May 31, 2007 BSD
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