begin  quoting Lan Barnes as of Tue, Sep 12, 2006 at 09:40:13AM -0700:
> On Tue, Sep 12, 2006 at 09:10:32AM -0700, Stewart Stremler wrote:
> > begin  quoting Lan Barnes as of Tue, Sep 12, 2006 at 09:10:31AM -0700:
> > > Please remind me again what the configuration issues are for having a
> > > box running sshd accept ssh connections within an intranet.
> > >
> > > My laptop can be pinged and I can ssh out, but when I try to ssh into it
> > > from elsewhere, I get a no route to host error. I've tried comparing the
> > > conf files in /etc/ssh (sshd_ and ssh_) with no flash of insight.
> > 
> > If you can ping it, how can you get a no route to host?
> 
> Beats me. That's why I asked.

Heh.

> > > The laptop is running FC 5 and the other machines are all in FC 4. Don't
> > > know if that matters.
> > 
> > Have you tried using nmap instead of ping to see what's there?
> 
> >From which machine?
  ^-- ???

>From the machine that could ping it.  Or are you pinging your laptop
from your laptop?

> > What does the output of "netstat -nr" look like?
> 
> >From which machine?
  ^-- ???
 
> I can get and post responses from the machines trying to ssh into the
> laptop, but I'll have to go home to run anything on the laptop since I
> can't ssh in.

Hm... I was under the impression that you were on a 192.168 subnet, not
that this was a home/work sort of thing.  Now I'm thinking that you have
a firewall and a NAT box doing their job (firewall is blocking incoming
connections, NAT box is translating from 192.168.x.y to whatever your
public IP is).

-- 
_ |\_
 \|


-- 
[email protected]
http://www.kernel-panic.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/kplug-list

Reply via email to