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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting SSH forwarding based on ports Post 302811975 by DGPickett on Friday 24th of May 2013 04:30:59 PM
Old 05-24-2013
VPN does not seem to be a need. No reconfiguration of sshd is necessary, either. Of course, the sshd on the far end must allow the tunnel type.

If you set up a tunnel with SSH, listening on one end and connecting out to some target host-port on the other, anyone who can get to the listener can use the target, as long as it is not a tcp protocol that acts on hosts and ports in the message stream, like FTP, and even that can be accommodated with additional tricks in many cases. Unlike the shell command part of the ssh session, user id is not in play, it is just a tcp wormhole you created. BTW, if the session has compression, so do the tunnel connections.
 

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CONNECT-TUNNEL(1p)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					CONNECT-TUNNEL(1p)

NAME
connect-tunnel - Create CONNECT tunnels through HTTP proxies SYNOPSIS
connect-tunnel [ -Lv ] [ -A user:pass ] [ -P proxy:port ] [ -C controlport ] [ -T port:host:hostport ] DESCRIPTION
connect-tunnel sets up tunneled connections to external hosts by redirecting connections to local ports towards thoses hosts/ports through a HTTP proxy. connect-tunnel makes use of the HTTP "CONNECT" method to ask the proxy to create a tunnel to an outside server. Be aware that some proxies are set up to deny outside tunnels (either to ports other than 443 or outside a specified set of outside hosts). OPTIONS
The program follows the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes. -A, --proxy-authentication user:password Proxy authentication information. Please note that all the authentication schemes supported by "LWP::UserAgent" are supported (we use an "LWP::UserAgent" internally to contact the proxy). -C, --control-port controlport The port to which one can connect to issue control commands to connect-tunnel. See "CONTROL CONNECTIONS" for more details about the available commands. -L, --local-only Create the tunnels so that they will only listen on "localhost". Thus, only connections originating from the machine that runs connect-tunnel will be accepted. That was the default behaviour in connect-tunnel version 0.02. -P, --proxy proxy[:port] The proxy is required to connect the tunnels. If no port is given, 8080 is used by default. See also "ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES". -T, --tunnel port:host:hostport Specifies that the given port on the local host is to be forwarded to the given host and hostport on the remote side. This works by allocating a socket to listen to port on the local side, and whenever a connection is made to this port, connect-tunnel forwards it to the proxy (with the credentials, if required), which in turn forwards it to the final destination. Note that this does not imply the use of any cryptographic system (SSL or any other). This is a simple TCP redirection. The security if any, is the one provided by the protocol used to connect to the destination through connect-tunnel. On Unix systems, only root can forward privileged ports. Note that you can setup tunnels to multiple destinations, by using the --tunnel option several times. -U, --user-agent string Specify User-Agent value to send in HTTP requests. The default is to send "connect-tunnel/version". -v, --verbose Verbose output. This option can be used several times for more verbose output. EXAMPLES
To connect to a SSH server running on "ssh.example.com", on port 443, through the proxy "proxy.company.com", running on port 8080, use the following command: connect-tunnel -P proxy.company.com:8080 -T 22:ssh.example.com:443 And now point your favorite ssh client to the machine running connect-tunnel. You can also emulate a "standard" user-agent: connect-tunnel -U "Mozilla/4.03 [en] (X11; I; Linux 2.1.89 i586)" -P proxy.company.com:8080 -T 22:ssh.example.com:443 connect-tunnel can easily use your proxy credentials to connect outside: connect-tunnel -U "Mozilla/4.03 [en] (X11; I; Linux 2.1.89 i586)" -P proxy.company.com:8080 -T 22:ssh.example.com:443 -A book:s3kr3t But if you don't want anybody else to connect to your tunnels and through the proxy with your credentials, use the --local-only option: connect-tunnel -U "Mozilla/4.03 [en] (X11; I; Linux 2.1.89 i586)" -P proxy.company.com:8080 -T 22:ssh.example.com:443 -A book:s3kr3t -L If you have several destinations, there is no need to run several instances of connect-tunnel: connect-tunnel -U "Mozilla/4.03 [en] (X11; I; Linux 2.1.89 i586)" -P proxy.company.com:8080 -A book:s3kr3t -L -T 22:ssh.example.com:443 -T 222:ssh2.example.com:443 But naturally, you will need to correctly set up the ports in your clients. Mmm, such a long command line would perfectly fit in an alias or a .BAT file. ";-)" ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
The environment variable "HTTP_PROXY" can be used to provide a proxy definition. The environment variable is overriden by the --proxy option, if passed to connect-tunnel. AUTHOR
Philippe "BooK" Bruhat, "<book@cpan.org>". I seem to have re-invented a well-known wheel with that script, but at least, I hope I have added a few interesting options to it. SCRIPT HISTORY
The first version of the script was a quick hack that let me go through a corporate proxy. Version 0.02 and version 0.03 were released on CPAN in 2003. Version 0.04 sits half-finished in a CVS repository at home: I couldn't decypher the spaghetti of my data structures any more. ":-(" Version 0.05 (and higher) are based on "Net::Proxy", and included with the "Net::Proxy" distribution. Even though it's not rocket science, connect-tunnel has been cited in at least one academic works: o HTTP Tunnels Through Proxies, Daniel Alman Available at SANS InfoSec Reading Room: Covert Channels <http://www.sans.org/rr/whitepapers/covert/> Direct link: <http://www.sans.org/rr/whitepapers/covert/1202.php> COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2003-2007, Philippe Bruhat. All rights reserved. LICENSE
This module is free software; you can redistribute it or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.10.1 2009-10-18 CONNECT-TUNNEL(1p)
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