On Thu, Nov 10, 2011 at 04:15:12PM +0800, Benimaur Gao wrote: > I want to [...] mount the local dir to [the] remote host > can i do such things behind NAT?
Darac Marjal <mailingl...@darac.org.uk> wrote: > I shall assume you are trying to share a directory on A called /srv to a > remote machine B as directory /mnt. This CANNOT be done from A. However, > you should be able to connect to B and the mount A:/srv onto /mnt using > SSHFS. In essense, then, B becomes the local machine and A is the remote > one. Possibly the complication that Benimaur Gao is concerned about, is that it may not be possible to get from B to A. It seems to me that the extra part of the solution here is to use the connection from A to B to build a reverse ssh tunnel that allows B to get back to A. Then the sshfs mount can be built. I've not tried this level of complexity for quite a while, but I think it would go something like this: hloc$ ssh -R localhost:10022:localhost:22 hrem hrem$ sudo sshfs localhost:/srv /mnt -p 10022 For purposes of illustration I've made the following assumptions: * "hloc" and "hrem" are names for the local and remote hosts * "/srv" is the directory to be mounted, and the mountpoint is "/mnt" * port 10022 is unused and available on hrem * the hostname is in the prompt to show on which host a command is run How efficient (and therefore how usable) this is, is an entirely different matter. You'll also find the connection breaks when you log out. This is intentional, but there are options to ssh that keep a connection alive so it's definitely not insurmountable. It's also possible to merge these two commands in to a single command run on hloc, but I figured you would want to see what was happening, first. Chris -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/csqso8x4ns....@news.roaima.co.uk