Whoops, bad form replying to my own post... 50 lashes with an Ethernet cable (ouch).If you telnet over ssh the next step is to telnet to localhost. Important step :)Rubin
This message was smashed out on a tiny screen from 100% recycled bits and electrons, please excuse fat fingers and spelling mitsakes!<div> </div><div> </div><!-- originalMessage --><div>-------- Original message --------</div><div>From: Rubin Bennett <[email protected]> </div><div>Date: 11/9/2015 8:33 PM (GMT-05:00) </div><div>To: [email protected] </div><div>Subject: Re: Linux_adult_swim Meeting today, November 9 at 5 PM at Hedding United Methodist, 40 Washington Street. </div><div> </div>If you want telnet over ssh (you know you do!) then run ssh user@host -L 23:telnethost:23Seriously is there anything ssh can't do?! If you want simpler ssl wrapped telnet, you probably want stunnel (man stunnel) :)Rubin This message was smashed out on a tiny screen from 100% recycled bits and electrons, please excuse fat fingers and spelling mitsakes!<div> </div><div> </div><!-- originalMessage --><div>-------- Original message --------</div><div>From: Anthony Carrico <[email protected]> </div><div>Date: 11/9/2015 8:19 PM (GMT-05:00) </div><div>To: [email protected] </div><div>Subject: Re: Linux_adult_swim Meeting today, November 9 at 5 PM at Hedding United Methodist, 40 Washington Street. </div><div> </div>On 11/09/2015 03:06 PM, Paul Flint wrote: > I just encountered tls enabled telnet, and I am frustrated. Anybody got > any idea how to do this on a linux system? If the service has an unencrypted port on localhost, then I suggest you create a tunnel to that with ssh, which is easy to do. I don't remember how to set up an ssl tunnel directly, but I think you can proxy through the various ssl libraries. -- Anthony Carrico
