I am using telnet just to see if the port accepts connections. That test
works fine internally. We are not running a telnet server. Also, we are
telnetting to the pcAnywhere port, not the telnet port. :)
- Original Message -
From: JJB [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: adp [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL
adp wrote:
I am using telnet just to see if the port accepts connections. That test
works fine internally. We are not running a telnet server. Also, we are
telnetting to the pcAnywhere port, not the telnet port. :)
I've only historical experience with PCAnywhere, nowadays sticking with
VNC
For your telnet test to pcanywhere ports on target Lan pc to work
you have to tell telnet on the target to listen on those ports.
I believe pcanywhere is one of those applications that imbed the ip
address of the remote and host into the packet data and used by the
application to establish
On Thu, May 06, 2004 at 11:37:09PM -0500, adp wrote:
And I am allowing in accessing via ipf:
pass in quick proto tcp from any to public-ip port = 5631 group 200
pass in quick proto udp from any to public-ip port = 5631 group 200
pass in quick proto tcp from any to public-ip port = 5632 group
This shouldn't be that hard, but I can't get it working.
I have a FreeBSD firewall with three NICs (Internet, LAN, DMZ). I have
bridging enabled between the Internet and DMZ interfaces.
I now have an internal computer (LAN) that needs to be accessible via
pcAnywhere.
I can telnet to the