Op 14-08-11 19:29, Mike Gabriel schreef: > Hi Paul, > > On Sa 13 Aug 2011 14:06:26 CEST Paul van der Vlis wrote: > >>>> Of cause I can make a port forwarding, or an SSH tunnel from the fat >>>> client to my computer, but maybe you have a better and more flexible >>>> idea? > >> No, it are very normal fat-clients behind NAT, and only I (the sysadmin) >> need connect to them, to help the people when there are problems. I am >> looking for an easy and flexible way to connect. > > PyHoca-GUI is targetted at system administrators who use X2go for system > administration. This is my primary use case... > > What I do is: > > o place a linux machine in the customer network and make it accessible > via > X2go (open SSH port with reverse NAT to this machine only) > o from their on... > - Windows clients: use X2go sessions as RDP-proxy connections > - Linux clients: PyHoca-GUI has SSH proxy support included, check > the config dialog Window for this > > PyHoca-GUI's great advantage compared to x2goclient is the handling of > multiple sessions to the same session profile as well as to multiple > session profiles.
Sounds very good. I've never tested PyHoca-GUI but now I need ;-) >> ( Hmmm, IPv6 is an option here. But I have many other customers where >> the ISP does not offer IPv6. ) > > No IPv6 ISP needed, use an IPv6 tunnel broker (e.g. SixXS): > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_IPv6_tunnel_brokers I have an ISP who provides native IPv6 over ADSL, and this customer too. But not all my customers have such a provider, using an IPv6 tunnel there could be an option. Bye, Paul. -- Paul van der Vlis Linux systeembeheer, Groningen http://www.vandervlis.nl _______________________________________________ X2go-User mailing list [email protected] https://lists.berlios.de/mailman/listinfo/x2go-user
