Raspberry Pi server w/out port forwarding [closed] - networking

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Closed 6 years ago.
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I would like to remote into my Pi from outside my home network. The problem is that my apartment provides me with wireless internet and I can't access the router to enable port-forwarding. Is there any way around this? A dynamic dns service perhaps?
I would like to use VNC SSH and/or FTP.

I usually use Team Viewer to remote a station behind NAT without activating port forwarding like in your situation.
You need to create an account on you team viewer application, and register your target station's team viewer to your account.
When you are away, please make sure to always open your target station's team viewer and you will be able remote your target station by first login to your team viewer account. Once you are logged in you will have a list of target station that you have registered. Simply double click one of the list and you can remote your target station.
VNC or SSH will not be able to work behind NAT without activating port forwarding because the router will try to open it's own port instead of your target station.

I was hoping to install Teamviwer in the Raspberry pi as well, and I sent an email off to the temviewer team. This was my response:
Hi Drano
Thank you very much for your message.
Teamviewer does not support ARM architecture. I will forward your suggestion to our product management. Such ideas are always welcome, although I can not promise when or if this Feature will be implemented, as the decision is based on public demand. Nevertheless, your feedback is very important to us as we want to continue to develop TeamViewer based on our user's needs and demands. We will be happy to inform you about realization of this feature.
If you have any further questions on our product, please feel free to contact us.
Best regards,
Harun Rashid
-Support Technician-
P.S.: TeamViewer 9 is ready!

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iPV 6 changes frequently for sip signalling [closed]

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We have been using Linphone for our calling services and its working fine on wifi and almost every cellular network except the one with iPV6 infrastructure.
The problem we discovered with iPV6 environment is that our signalling ip changes very frequently and as a result our call drops after 30 seconds timeout.
Any guide regarding this matter will be helpful.
Thats happens often on 5G network.
You can do nothing here, it is not related to asterisk, it is related to how 5G providers handle NAT. The do not care.
Only thing you can do is use android/apple push mechanism to force your application to re-register with new IP.
You can do nothing if customer change GSM cells while in call. Except maybe issue re-invite, but that is really hard and I know no softphone which do that correctly.
Another option is to use tunnel with ping inside it/resetup(or setup ignore source IP for tunnel) and put your sip traffic inside tunnel. But that WILL eat battery a lot and customer will complain or uninstall your app.

What's the difference between the World Wide Web and the Internet? [closed]

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I've seen a few online resources saying that WWW != The Internet. Can someone explain like they would to a complete noob?
Found that WWW consists of all web resourcces and identifies them using URL's. What is the internet then? Is it not the same? Or is the WWW a subset of the internet?
Pls help me understand
The internet is a global system of interconnected computer networks, upon which WWW is only one of the usable protocols, being used for multimedia (text+audio+graphic) information, which makes WWW part of the Internet.
In example, FTP which is a file transfer protocol, is part of the internet functionality, but not a part of WWW (but can be used as an ftp link as part of web page).
This is the reason why every web site address starts with http(s):// - you are telling the browser that you are using the http(s) protocol which is the protocol used by the World Wide Web.
Hope it was clear...
The internet is a global network of interconnected computer networks, while the World Wide Web (also known as the Web) is a collection of documents and other resources, linked by hyperlinks and URLs, that are accessed via the internet. The internet is the infrastructure that allows for the communication and transfer of data, while the Web is a way to access and share that data.
To use the internet, you need a device such as a computer, smartphone, or tablet, and a way to connect to the internet, such as through a wireless network or an internet service provider (ISP). Once connected to the internet, you can use a web browser to access the Web and view websites, as well as send and receive email, participate in online discussions, and more.

What is the cleanest way to set up a remote control of my desktop from my laptop? [closed]

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Closed 6 years ago.
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So, to use some simulation tools and the raw power of the fully armed and operational battlestation that is my Windows 7 desktop, from my Windows 10 laptop, I was hoping to finally try my hand at setting up some sort of remote control between the two.
Particularly, I want to
Be able to control my desktop from my laptop (duh)
To be able to start the remote control software remotely, meaning all that will need to be done is fire up and log in on the desktop, then the laptop can handle the rest.
To be able to do this over the internet, not over a LAN connection.
To be able to do all of the above, at a reasonable speed, without too noticeable a latency, for my own sanity when typing code over this connection.
So, have any of you done something like this before? I'm sure there's someone out there whose dabbled with this before.
Optional, edited out requirements to replace, or accompany #2 if possible:
2a. Be able to put my desktop in standby mode for a few days (for power concerns) over this remote connection, then wake it back up using the remote connection over the laptop
2b. Be able to log into the password protected admin account on the desktop over this remote connection, after waking from safe mode.
You could try TeamViewer, I don't think that you can do #2 and #3 tho.
But you can also control it with your smartphone.
Actually I don't think you can do #2 and #3 with any remote control software, that needs a physical switch.
By setting up a DDNS, port forwarding, and enabling wake on LAN, TeamViewer can provide all of the functionality I needed, even waking it from standbyover the internet.

Barracuda 340 Load Balancer Won't Port Forward [closed]

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Closed 5 years ago.
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We have Barracuda 340 that we are trying to set up for load balancing across multiple servers, each with multiple applications running. If I set up a service with the specific port we are sending UDP packets to, and one IP per Real Server (with the same port as the service) everything works fine. Like the setup below:
1. Virtual IP: 192.168.14.10:20510
1. Real Server #1: 192.168.13.4:20510
2. Real Server #2: 192.168.13.5:20510
The problem is, if we try to run multiples of our applications on a single server, using different ports, it does not load balance (this does work without attempting to load balance). It just ignores the one with the different port. I can send traffic directly to that server port combo though, so I know it is listening. That would be similar to the setup below:
1. Virtual IP: 192.168.14.10:20510
1. Real Server #1: 192.168.13.4:20510
2. Real Server #2: 192.168.13.4:20511
I also tried using different NICs on the same server, and binding the applications to the specific NICs. When I do that, it completely ignores that server, and sends nothing to it.
I'm not sure if this is a limitation of the 340 device? Or if I am missing some simple settings that I've not found in the manual, yet.
Thanks for any assistance with this...
This looks to have just been an issue with the device we are using... Company bought it off Ebay, so... :)

internal LAN connectivity without internet [closed]

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Closed 7 years ago.
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I have a small doubt regarding the LAN as i Havesome pcs in my office i want to connect them internally with the little cable connection but i don't want to use any internet activity from them.(purpose is the share the data internally and no use of internet).
And i have some more selected people who want to use the internet access so i want to give some special access for internet for that selected laptops.
Iam a kid in networks as i don't have any idea how i can start and move with the project suggestions are mostly accepted
You can do the following :-
Establish a small LAN connection in your office which will consist of those selected PC's which are not intended to run internet at all! You can simply establish LAN connection using routers and switches! Then,develop a small web-server like thing on one of the PC's which will work as server and the rest will work like clients! You can simply set up a distributed server which will take care of synchronisation things too(but, that is not advisable for a basic OR a newbie)!
But, simply multiple-clients and a server is what you need to
establish using LAN connection for and make network file-sharing access permissions for all the systems... There are several softwares to transfer files and internally communicate like a small mail-server intended for OS like Windows,Linux,etc.
Next for those laptops which you wanna connect to internet---please establish a source of internet like any ISP and so! Next,a gain establish a small LAN connection among those PC's which you want to connect to internet to. That's it,VOILA!
Next step of yours would be simply to configure DNS setting,IP-Address of the ISP,Subnet Mask and Gateway and that is damn easy. You simply need to add it to the router settings through which all of your systems,which are intended to access internet,would be connected. If you want to achieve the first thing with these PC's, then simply establish a local web-server or mail server for file transfer or mails,etc. locally within the office.
Another possibility :-
Establish the web server communication with all the PC's connected. Connect all the PC's and laptop to router's and switches as desired. Keep a note of IP-Address of all the PC's and laptops. Now, install a web-filter/firewall which will restrict users from accessing internet based on their hostname & IP-Address. Remember for this to take place, all the systems must have static IP-Address allocation,not the DHCP configuration!
I guess these are some of the possible steps. But,there can be several effective steps too...
Best wishes from my side!

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