On Monday 24 October 2011 02:18:39 Ed Greshko wrote: > On 10/24/2011 02:04 AM, Joe Zeff wrote: > > On 10/23/2011 02:09 AM, Abu Attar Musharih wrote: > >> The customer service said that ssh is not allowed. So, what to do > >> then? I badly need a server with global IP for experimenting grid > >> computing. > > > > Configure ssh to use a non-standard port such as 6002. > > FWIW.... If an ISP has gone through the trouble of blocking ports of > well known services chances are they have also blocked incoming SYN > packets on higher ports as well. > > Thus my suggestion to use a port of a well known service that is allowed. Oh, be careful Ed, :-) I got bashed quite a lot for suggesting a similar thing about openvpn couple of threads ago... I learned that the proper, politically correct way to answer this is the following: if the ISP decided to block port 22, they probably did it for security reasons (and not because someone over there is a moron), and it's both illegal and unethical to go behind their backs and create a tunnel through their firewall without their consent. The OP should check his contract with the ISP, because it might be illegal or against their terms of service to use ssh on their network. He might get sued and end up in jail, for all we know. You wouldn't want to encourage the OP into such bad behavior by giving out advice to use an open port outside of its intended purposes, would you now? :-D Oh, btw, as a piece of preemptive advice --- if you reply to this, don't use any strange words like "legitimate" or similar, 'cause someone might pick up a dictionary against you... ;-) P.S. Sorry folks, just couldn't resist... :-D No hard feelings, Ed! :-) Best, :-) Marko -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines