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Just posted der.hans presentation on SSH tunnels that he gave to the
Phoenix Linux Users Group on June 8th<br>
<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://youtu.be/bWtPCARl0U0">https://youtu.be/bWtPCARl0U0</a><br>
<br>
Use SSH to create secure tunnels across untrusted networks and
hosts. Learn tunneling basics, tunneling GUI applications, tunneling
into a machine behind a firewall, SOCKS proxy and other scenarios. <br
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Need to connect to an intranet? Need to connect back to your home
network? Need a VPN, but want more control over what gets forwarded?
Use SSH tunnels to create specific, secure connections. SSH, the
original VPN. The presentation will include an SSH tunneling primer
and more complex examples including forwarding web traffic,
forwarding mail, and, of course, forwarding SSH connections. Use
reverse connections to get into a home network that doesn't allow
inbound SSH traffic. Securely connect across someone else's machine.
Use SOCKS to forward arbitrary services. Learn to create and use SSH
keys and to use them to limit what command can be run when SSH
connects. Learn how you can sometimes run commands via SSH even
though your server is thrashing too hard to allow logins. If you're
a GNU/Linux system administrator and you don't know how to do all
these things please read at least ssh(1), ssh-agent(1),
ssh-keygen(1) and sshd(8) and also attend this talk.<br>
<br>
Brian Cluff<br>
<br>
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