@@perad1895 You need open port for ssh (22 port) of your device ip in your wifi admin login/dashboard under port forwarding setting. It would be better if you have public IP.
@@SavvyNik I want to do the reverse, Linux to Windows, but windows default SSH Server is not working, I need to try an alternative, oh by the way, Itried everything you deed with puTTY --->> boom!💥
Hello! Thank you for the video, I typed the IP address on my local browser but it didn't display any page. How can I access the remote Ubuntu server from my local browser?
I've done this at my local network between Linux machines before but how can you do this over the internet? I have 3 different machines that serve different purposes. A nas, a apache/ php and a raspberry pi machine. I assume you need the public IP provided by your isp but how do you choose which machine? Can it tunnel through my router?
You have to open up port 22 through your firewall and use the public ip address supplied by your ISP. I'd be careful doing so as it exposes your port 22 to the outside world. Instead you can look up something called reverse ssh which will let you create a more secure outbound connection.
Need to setup Windows SSH Client tools? ruclips.net/video/3hbJZZ4c1io/видео.html
Can you please make a video tutorial on how to connect to this SSH using different network, This is working only if i am on same network.
found any good ones?
@@perad1895 You need open port for ssh (22 port) of your device ip in your wifi admin login/dashboard under port forwarding setting. It would be better if you have public IP.
It's actually not a remote SSH. The two machines are in the same LAN.
can someone help me to do that with a outside network? i almost search the whole internet but non of them works with outside network
Great video with great editing. I would love to see you dive into the ssh protocol.
Maybe how the keys work ?
Thanks for the compliments and suggestions. I think showing how ssh keys get exchanged and work would be great.
Very Useful
Glad to hear that
just tried sshing into a windows laptop (mine) and it just it doesnt work., the layers of complexity that windows adds is jsut mind boggling
This was not a remote access, it was on your local network.
it is remote access. since you are remotely connecting to a device.
@@vengie01 that's the "we got mc donalds at home" version of a remote connection
@@mafiazukaits still a remote connection though
this only works when you are on same network , what to do when I wanted to connect from different network
You need the public ip address along with the correct port?
Do you know how to ssh onto a private ip? "ssh: connect to host port 22: Network is unreachable"
same here
And thanks again👍👍!
:) thanks for constantly supporting @Félix
i can't login, permission denied.
it worked, yoohooooo. I logged in from windows 10 into my red hat box, yippeeeeeee
Let’s goooo
@@SavvyNik I want to do the reverse, Linux to Windows, but windows default SSH Server is not working, I need to try an alternative, oh by the way, Itried everything you deed with puTTY --->> boom!💥
thanks for the video.
I do got the access to terminal but I want to buy pass the authentication process, how can I do it ?
Exchange ssh keys
all the time in my second semester i couldnt understand what that dump professor is saying about SSH and yet you explained it in almost 9 minutes.
Haha glad things clicked
Does partitioning order on ubuntu desktop matters?
I mean first partition is efi then 2nd should be root and last one swap?
Typically this is done so that you can easily resize your root part if necessary. If you put efi behind you won’t have the capability to resize
Excellent
Thanks
thanks!!!
Mom i want to connect remotely to my pc
"we got remote connection at home" and ONLY at home
Hello! Thank you for the video, I typed the IP address on my local browser but it didn't display any page.
How can I access the remote Ubuntu server from my local browser?
yes you can,
I've done this at my local network between Linux machines before but how can you do this over the internet?
I have 3 different machines that serve different purposes. A nas, a apache/ php and a raspberry pi machine.
I assume you need the public IP provided by your isp but how do you choose which machine? Can it tunnel through my router?
You have to open up port 22 through your firewall and use the public ip address supplied by your ISP. I'd be careful doing so as it exposes your port 22 to the outside world. Instead you can look up something called reverse ssh which will let you create a more secure outbound connection.
F
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