I’ve got a shared hosting account and asked if I’m able to install a git repo 
host (eg., from gitlab) so I can use it to host my own private git repos.

I’m not very famliar with git or hosting it, but I understand that It requires 
an SSH connection for the transfers.

I asked the support folks, and they replied that they can do that, but they 
need to configure it so the SSH uses a static IP so they can white-list it in 
their firewall.

That requires me to always access it from the same place, which seems a bit 
over-restrictive for my needs. 

(I have Cox internet at home, so I probably have a static IP most of the time, 
at least until I reboot my modem and it allocates a different IP.)

I’m wondering if there are any options where I could use, say, a VPN, to set up 
a redirect such that the outgoing IP for the SSH is always static?

Anybody familiar with git is free to offer alternatives. Frankly, I’m not sure 
why it would be built exculsively on using SSH as the data channel. Doesn’t it 
have any other means of connecting to it?

Alternatively, this hosting account is a reseller account, and while I’m not 
exactly sure how many IPs they give me, I know they’re all static. 

So I could set up another domain on the same host with something that lets me 
do a redirect to the SSH on the other domain where git is hosted?

Alternatively, what’s wrong with just using a port for the SSH channel way up 
in the 20,000 range? 

I get their concern with security, but … solving the problem with a static IP 
seems so 1990ish.

Suggestions are welcome.

-David Schwartz



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