On Wed, Feb 08, 2006 at 12:54:38AM +0100, Pascal Bleser wrote:
> Start the ssh tunnel locally (e.g. on port 6667), to connect to your PC at 
> home, and redirect
> traffic to one of the freenode.net servers.
> When having done that, just start any IRC client (xchat, kopete, kvirc, gaim, 
> irssi, konversation,
> ... ) and connect to 127.0.0.1:6667

No idea what you are trying to do, but if you have ssh to your machine at
home, just ssh tot it with whatever you use (putty is on the CD's) and
just use that. No need to do any tunneling or whatever.

Some providers close ports below 1024, so you might need to set up ssh to
run (as well) on a port above 1024. Also some places will filter out all
ports, exept for 80 and 443, so you could use those.

You could also be in a situation where you have a provider that blocks
below 1024 AND a place that blocks all but 80 and 443. Then you are stuck.
Even http://cgiirc.sourceforge.net/ running on your home machine won't
work then.

Another problem might be that you are on dialup. You can use 'at' to let
your home machine make a connection 1t 17:57. You can close that connection
manually when the session is done.

If somebody sets up cgi::irc, it would be nice. However I think it is
not up to Novell or openSUSE to get around policies of the place you are.
The place that has placed those policies has done so for a reason. Wether
this reason is good or bad is not up to us to decide. Trying to break
those policies by going around them is above and beyond the call of duty
for Novell.

houghi
-- 
"I'd love to go out with you, but the man on television told me to say
tuned."

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