On 11/9/07, Jake Conk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
My question though is why did you give this rdr rule?
rdr pass on $int_if proto tcp from any to !$ftp_server port ftp -
127.0.0.1 port 8022
What special feature does switching any to !$ftp_server add to the
pf rules? Should I modify mine to
I've been having great fun with FTP - active and passive - and
assumed it was the wrong port here or there or something strange in
pf - my fault every time so far.
Running with pf + ftp-proxy box, and proftpd or vsftpd on boxes
behind that on two different networks, and then NAT clients on
On 11/8/07, Jake Conk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
I have a computer running OpenBSD 4.2 which is acting as my router.
Behind it I have a a ftp-server which is working fine thanks to
ftp-proxy but one of the problems I am having is ftp'ing out of my
network. I am able to connect and
On 11/8/07, Jake Conk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Ok I understand I'm supposed to have another instance of ftp-proxy
running so that it can open up ports on my router to allow data
connections to be established from remote hosts but I'm not sure how I
should configured ftp-proxy for that and my
Ok I understand I'm supposed to have another instance of ftp-proxy
running so that it can open up ports on my router to allow data
connections to be established from remote hosts but I'm not sure how I
should configured ftp-proxy for that and my pf... Lets start with
ftp-proxy first then handle
Knitti,
Thanks, I created another instance of ftp-proxy with these options:
-p 8021 127.0.0.1
...and put in my rdr this rule:
rdr on $int_if proto tcp from any to any port ftp - 127.0.0.1 port 8021
Everything seems to work now, I can ftp out and people can ftp in :)
My question though is why
Hello,
I have a computer running OpenBSD 4.2 which is acting as my router.
Behind it I have a a ftp-server which is working fine thanks to
ftp-proxy but one of the problems I am having is ftp'ing out of my
network. I am able to connect and establish connections to outside
servers but I am not
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