Kat wrote:
Hi folks!
My new understanding of networking is coming along, but still a little shaky. I have been trying to set up ssh to work on my home machine because I want to practice Linux stuff and access my PC if I happen to be away from home on the weekends.
I've done this a few times with OS X Macs (it takes 30 seconds to set up) and ONCE with Linux.
I've installed OpenSSH with success, and from my local machine I can "ssh localhost" with success (127.0.0.1 works too, of course)
The problem is I am trying ssh (my ip) and I get "Connection refused".
It's not getting as far as asking for a login?
This happens both from my parents' machine (in another town - Go Mom for downloading and running putty), and from my own (that ssh is running on).
I take it you are using the 192 address you give us below as the destination...
I suspect the problem has to do with my router, either regarding my rather prudent settings (LAN connection must be authenticated, *and* have a whitelisted MAC address), or more likely, I am missing something in setup to allow incoming connections that get forwarded to my specific machine. This is where my understanding falls apart at the moment... help?
Sean will be able to give more specific advice, but I think the problem isn't your router. I think it sounds like your computer is only partially set up to accept incoming connections. You /may/ have to set up the firewall or permissions in Linux to allow for incoming connections on that port. By using localhost you aren't getting outside your computer. By using the 192 address you are going to the router and back. It would be nice to know if you can ssh out to a working machine... This way we can determine where the problem is. I suspect you are not far from a working solution (maybe a minute and a half).
I use a DLink without any special setup and can access my Macs with my Linux box.
I've got a linksys/cisco wrt120n local IP 192.168.1.100 local router IP 192.168.1.1
internet IP in the 24.something range :)
Let me know if more info is required.
I think you almost have it.
Thanks!
Katherine Scrupa Network Technology CCNA student, RRC
Later Mike