When you say "remote PC" are you coming from a remote Unix machine or a PC running Windows? If it's the latter, you will also need to open up port 88 UDP if you're using the Windows NT/2000/XP client, and port 750 UDP if you're running the Windows 9x client. (These are Kerberos ports.)
I put together some slides for the AFS workshop at LISA 2002 about using AFS in a firewall environment that might help; they're at: http://www.sebby.org/afs/ Brian Sebby On Mon, Jan 13, 2003 at 06:32:58PM -0500, Francisco Yumiceva wrote: > Hi, > > I can see from outside the university (from home) these ports: > > 7000/udp open afs3-fileserver > 7001/udp open afs3-callback > 7002/udp open afs3-prserver > 7003/udp open afs3-vlserver > 7004/udp open afs3-kaserver > 7005/udp open afs3-volser > 7007/udp open afs3-bos > > 1024/udp open unknown > 1025/udp open > 1028/udp open ms-lsa > 1030/udp open iad1 > 1031/udp open iad2 > 1032/udp open > ... and more ports... > > so why I still get: > Unable to authenticate to AFS because Authentication Server was > unavailable. > > What is wrong? > > Francisco -- Brian Sebby ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) | Distributed Computing Administration Phone: +1 630.252.9935 | Electronics and Computing Technologies Fax: +1 630.252.9689 | Argonne National Laboratory _______________________________________________ OpenAFS-info mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.openafs.org/mailman/listinfo/openafs-info
