[Message Prev][Message
Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Message
Index][Thread Index]
Re: [OT] Port Redirection
Ahh, I see. It all makes sense now :-)
Cheers,
Tim.
On 1/24/07, David Guest <david.guest@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> The bit in between the isp and target website is the public proxy cum
> redirection service I'm looking for. As mentioned some anonymous
surfing
> sites almost seem to do it but not quite.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: ukha_d@xxxxxxx [mailto:ukha_d@xxxxxxx] On Behalf
> Of Tim Hawes
> Sent: 24 January 2007 15:32
> To: ukha_d@xxxxxxx
> Subject: Re: [ukha_d] [OT] Port Redirection
>
> I'm not sure I fully understand this, but to do what you want, don't
you
> need "control" of the remote website?
>
> i.e. if you're connecting from work to your home network then that's
> fine as you can have full config access to your home boxes, but if
your
> trying to redirect to a different port *after* your ISP, don't you
need
> to access the bit of the ether between your ISP and the target
website?
>
> Sorry if I'm appearing thick, I just couldn't see how it would work
> otherwise :-)
>
> Cheers,
>
> Tim.
>
> On 1/24/07, David Guest <david.guest@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> > Thanks for the info. In my case, it's an external web site that
I'm
> > trying to connect to, so:
> >
> > outgoing port 80 on my machine -> isp port 80 -> 80 some
external
> > proxy thing 8900 -> destination website port 8900
> >
> > And any information coming back to go through the chain. I have
looked
>
> > at no-ip.com, which looks like it should do it, but just seems to
> > reroute including the port, so my browser url still reads
> > fdssd.com:8900 and goes very slowly.
> >
> > Regards,
> >
> > David
UKHA_D Main Index |
UKHA_D Thread Index |
UKHA_D Home |
Archives Home
|