Hello,

JRW> Okay, you got 2 possibilities....

JRW> 1) He needs to open a tunnel back to himself for you....
JRW>    This is done with the parameter -R 5900:144.60.x.x:5900
JRW>    Then you connect to  192.168.1.200:5900 and you get his machine!
JRW>    (you need the following putty options, 
JRW>    "local ports accept connections from other hosts" and
JRW>    "remote ports do the same")
JRW>    (you need to enable "AllowTcpForwarding yes", and 
JRW>     "GatewayPorts yes" in /etc/ssh/sshd_config on your server...)

We have tried yesterday the same configuration, but SSH config file
was not set with the two keywords you wrote. After adding these two
and restarting ssh server it works perfect. I just tried it with
my friend in local network (after solving disabled loopback via
registry modification). For sure it will work through internet.

You are my personal ssh from now ;)
Thanks a lot!!


JRW> 2) Use the "VNCViewer -listen" mode...

We also tried this one, but no luck. never mind, first solution is
elegant, easier and works.


One more question. Similiar situation: my computer --- my linux server
--- internet --- firewall blocking all ports from internet --- and
finally my PC in my office.

(following has nothing to do with your solution - I realy need your
solution for another purpose)

Now, I am able to create VNC tunnel with my office PC - so I am able
to work virtualy directly in office.

Here it comes: Basicaly, I do not need VNC for my work. All I need is
to access servers in company's network. Let's say I need to access
company's web site, which is accessible only from inside the network
(de facto real intranet site); or I need to map internal server shared
directory...

Is it possible to make solution, that it would be possible to access
that intranet site, to map network drives, or ping other company's
servers directly from my home computer?

My computer has at the moment set default gateway to my linux server,
which is doing NAT and I can access Internet from my computer.
My idea is to set "default gateway" to my office PC...

(is this called VPN?)

Can you help with this one?

Boris
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