FTPD & SSHD server

Andri Kok freebsd_list at hotmail.com
Sun May 23 17:05:00 PDT 2004


Hi Bart,

Thx for the reply. The problem that I had from windows was "connection 
timeout". When I try to ssh to my BSD box, it prompts the login name, than 
it hangs till it finally get connection time out. The same goes with ftp and 
telnet. Regarding the error logs, which ones should i check? he path would 
be nice =) And thx for your suggestion, I'll try to do that as soon as I 
have time (still got assignments to do ;) thx again -)

Regards,

Andri


>From: Bart Silverstrim <bsilver at chrononomicon.com>
>To: "Andri Kok" <freebsd_list at hotmail.com>
>CC: freebsd-questions at freebsd.org
>Subject: Re: FTPD & SSHD server
>Date: Sun, 23 May 2004 10:29:07 -0400
>
>
>On May 23, 2004, at 10:04 AM, Andri Kok wrote:
>
>>Hello fellas,
>>
>>I have FTPD and SSHD running. The way enabled it was by uncommenting lines 
>>in inetd.conf. Now, If I access it from the outside (school's lab to my 
>>home computer, we have static IP) it works. But If my friends try to 
>>access it from the local network, it doesn't work (Using windows). I set 
>>up my server using a DHCP assigned IP address (C class), and the router 
>>that I use is the default router from my adsl modem. Should I use the 
>>server as the gateway as well? suggestions? TIA guys =)
>>
>
>You mean if your friends try accessing the server from the *internal* 
>network it won't let them, but from the outside world going into the server 
>it works fine?
>
>A) Did you verify the IP address they are connecting to is the actual 
>internal IP the server has?
>B) Is the server set to reject certain IP addresses from accessing those 
>services?
>C) What do the logs have to say about the connection attempts?
>
>If *I* were setting it up, I'd advise not having the server set up using 
>DHCP internally.  Set the server system to a static IP outside of the 
>router's DHCP range, then make sure the port forwarding on the router is 
>set up properly to forward those protocols to the internal server's static 
>IP address.  Only the router would be the gateway, as it is what is 
>handling the routing of packets to the Internet (Unless you're setting up 
>your BSD system to act as a proxy server with something like Squid...but I 
>think that's outside the scope of your question :-)
>
>I've seen this setup several times...you have a static IP as seen from the 
>Internet (actually it hits a router/NAT/soho device just behind the cable 
>modem or DSL modem); that device is set to forward certain services to 
>internal machines.  Those machines should have static addresses to prevent 
>the server from "wandering" if the DHCP address changes for some reason.  
>Leave the DHCP to be sent to visiting machines and non-server workstations 
>on the internal network...if you don't have a reason for them to constantly 
>keep the IP, then they're a candidate for DHCP (advice?  Don't do it unless 
>you have notebook PCs.  Home and small networks usually don't present such 
>a management quagmire that it's too difficult to keep static IPs on them.  
>I personally have my internal computers set to static IPs with a DHCP 
>server handing out only a narrow number of IPs for the visiting laptops I 
>use from work and the occasional playing with the PDA with wireless 
>access...it's much easier to see if another system is hopping the network 
>when an "alien" MAC address shows up in the logs; that's just my personal 
>take on it though).
>
>Hope that helps...if you can, try posting errors from the server logs if 
>the above suggestions don't help you.
>
>-Bart
>

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