![]() ![]() ![]() Also, same problem, i cannot use x11 because it defeats the purpose of working on the school computers, more powerful than my small laptop and better screens But don't worry, we are talking very important school projects so backups and snapshots will be made. Yes, i do understand the issues you are raising: i am guessing you are saying it is unsafe to work directly on a server, just like it is unsafe to work on a USB key. also, should i look at putty log or freenas ssh log? i dont know what option to use for putty log. when trying to forward a port as root, it says permission denied (public key), and at one point it would ask my password and after entering it right, it would say permission denied (public key, password) (yes i ma using public key auth) But it is the freenas root right (not the client root)? so i can just use sudo i guess since 445 is port used for smb, this is the one i will need to tunnel right. While i am at it, i'll ask a couple more questions. I cannot figure out the problem, so please help. I can connect to the webgui with However, if i try using a command to establish the connection, such as ssh -L 5001:192.168.1.14:4567 192.168.1.14 -p 10987, nothing happens in my web browser Everything works with putty's tunnel section as so: To test ssh tunneling, i was trying to create a tunnel to access the webgui (running on port 4567). Needless to say i do not have administrator rights on those pcs, so no editing drivers or creating a loopback network controller ). My goal is to use a samba share on university computers, which support add network location on windows, but all this tunneling through ssh. The ssh clients are running windows (using putty) I am in Europe, using an ISP which does not allow me to connect to my network from the internet, when i am localy in the network (sry for bad explenation ): testing is done locally but some things could therefore be different Router forwarding ssh connections on port 10987 to the server ![]() I have an old computer running freenas 9.10.1 on 192.168.1.14 with ssh First off i have to thank the awesome community which allowed me to learn so much in so little time. ![]()
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