On Sunday, 21 June 2020 10:25:47 BST Keith Edmunds wrote:
> I know there are challenges, but being able to directly ssh to your RPis
> from the outside, ideally filtered by source IP, would be considerably
> simple. I know you said that network is owned by people who don't
> understand it and so wo
On Sun, 21 Jun 2020 10:20:24 +0100, d-...@hadrian-way.co.uk said:
> Am I missing the point?
Probably not.
I know there are challenges, but being able to directly ssh to your RPis
from the outside, ideally filtered by source IP, would be considerably
simple. I know you said that network is owned
On Sunday, 21 June 2020 09:55:51 BST Keith Edmunds wrote:
> I'm pleased you got it working, but...it sounds like a nightmare to
> support and maintain. Very hacky, undocumented, alpha software, multi-hoop
> jumping.
Yes and no. It isn't entirely undocumented just somewhat inadequately
undocument
I'm pleased you got it working, but...it sounds like a nightmare to
support and maintain. Very hacky, undocumented, alpha software, multi-hoop
jumping.
Do you have a clear understanding of how it works, what components do
what, why each is there, and a network diagram marked with subnet
addresses?
On Saturday, 20 June 2020 18:17:20 BST Patrick Wigmore wrote:
> doesn't complete after 64 hops, but
>
> $ traceroute -I
>
> completes after 18 hops. The -I option is to 'Use ICMP ECHO as probe.'
I tried that, but it didn't complete with the -I switch either. :-)
So I was mulling over this l
On Sat, 20 Jun 2020 17:22:02 +0100, Terry Coles wrote:
> On Saturday, 20 June 2020 15:21:40 BST Terry Coles wrote:
> > What's the minimum needed to get something up on the Internet that
> > would respond to a query of some kind? I've looked at various
> > Tutorials and they all seem to be a fair b
On Saturday, 20 June 2020 17:21:04 BST Patrick Wigmore wrote:
> You could use Python 3's http.server module, which you probably
> already have installed.
I asked for simple and that's what you gave me.
I'll give it a go tomorrow (I have things to do this evening).
The developer of PiStrong has c
On Saturday, 20 June 2020 15:21:40 BST Terry Coles wrote:
> What's the minimum needed to get something up on the Internet that would
> respond to a query of some kind? I've looked at various Tutorials and they
> all seem to be a fair bit of work. I have another Pi which could be used in
> place o
On Sat, 20 Jun 2020 15:21:40 +0100, Terry Coles wrote:
> > Personally my next step would be to temporarily stick some
> > relatively easy-to-configure server of some kind online via the
> > home router. E.g. a web server serving a unique web page, and
> > then try to connect to that via the phone h
On Saturday, 20 June 2020 15:21:40 BST Terry Coles wrote:
> What's the minimum needed to get something up on the Internet that would
> respond to a query of some kind? I've looked at various Tutorials and they
> all seem to be a fair bit of work. I have another Pi which could be used in
> place o
On Saturday, 20 June 2020 14:48:50 BST Patrick Wigmore wrote:
> Could you elaborate on what you mean by the Cert settings? Is that
> something to do with the VPN software? Which VPN software did you end
> up choosing anyway?! I don't remember you saying. :)
Yes. The VPN Tools create a Cert Packag
On Sat, 20 Jun 2020 10:53:14 +0100, Terry Coles wrote:
> I'm trying to test my Raspberry Pi VPN Server which is currently
> installed in my workroom. It has Internet access on one side via
> my Home Router and access to my Pi network on the other. I have
> successfully tested this setup from insi
On Saturday, 20 June 2020 13:49:10 BST Hamish McIntyre-Bhatty wrote:
> The only thing I know related to this is that Android devices sometimes
> have a bug where you have to run a shell command on them to get
> tethering working (I did on mine), but clearly that's not the problem
> you're having se
The only thing I know related to this is that Android devices sometimes
have a bug where you have to run a shell command on them to get
tethering working (I did on mine), but clearly that's not the problem
you're having seeing as general internet access is working.
Ignoring the ping, can you conne
On Saturday, 20 June 2020 13:12:42 BST PeterMerchant wrote:
> I don't know who 8.8.8.8 is,
That is one of Google's DNS Servers.
> but can you 'ping google.com' or nasa.com?
Yes and yes. Actually pinging the Fully Qualified Domain name of the site,
simply shows that the DNS Server is accessible
On 20/06/2020 10:53, Terry Coles wrote:
Hi,
I've got something going on that I don't under stand (this is normal I hear
you saying).
I'm trying to test my Raspberry Pi VPN Server which is currently installed in
my workroom. It has Internet access on one side via my Home Router and access
to my
On Saturday, 20 June 2020 11:04:30 BST Terry Coles wrote:
> I don't know why but I can no longer ping the Home Router from my Android
> Phone. I was sure that it had worked earlier, but must have been mistaken.
Ignore this. I had still got tethering enabled.
If I disable tethering, but don't c
On Saturday, 20 June 2020 10:53:14 BST Terry Coles wrote:
> However, I can't ping my Home Router's WAN address. if I disable the
> hotspot, I can ping it successfully from my Android phone.
I don't know why but I can no longer ping the Home Router from my Android
Phone. I was sure that it had w
Hi,
I've got something going on that I don't under stand (this is normal I hear
you saying).
I'm trying to test my Raspberry Pi VPN Server which is currently installed in
my workroom. It has Internet access on one side via my Home Router and access
to my Pi network on the other. I have succe
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