Hi,

One thing I know you CAN do is to mount the remote smb-filesystems by
forwarding 139 e.g.

Set up local forward on 127.0.0.1 port 139 with your ssh-client of choice.
Then mount \\127.0.0.1\sharename
(or do: 'net use x \\127.0.0.1\sharename').

This works with NT (to some extent with win95/98 but I have heard that
there are some pitfalls there). The catch is that you can't browse which
shares are available, you have to know that. But I guess this would be a
good start since it will allow you to at least use fileshares from the
office to "home-machines".

I know very little about NT/NT-domains and such, excuse me if this info is
irrelevant to you.

Cheers,

/Mats

On Sat, 30 Oct 1999, Tom Wells wrote:

> Hi,
> 
> I'd like to create a pseudo-VPN for our small company by installing the
> SSH client for windows on our employees home machines.  I would like to
> have the users ssh over to a firewall over the net (most of our users 
> have xDSL, not dial-up connections), and then be able to login to our
> NT domain.  
> 
> Specifically, I'm interested in forwarding the netbios traffic (137 and 
> 139 at the very least) traffic between the remote host and the internal 
> network.
> 
> Has anybody pursued this?
> 
> Thanks
> 
> Tom
> -- 
> ######################################################################
> Tom Wells
> Sleepy Hollow Consulting, Inc.       email:       [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Unix Systems Administration          alpha-page:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> ######################################################################
> 

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