Why not set up a secure shell tunnel from the device you're using when
outside the LAN into the RasPi and tunnel to 192.168.1.194 on whatever
port you need.
Then connect to 127.0.0.1:{tunnel_port} on the device.
I do this with PuTTY all the time so I can use a single port forward and
have public key authentication to get to things on the LAN in a more
secure way.
On 1/6/2023 1:59 PM, π Good Guy π wrote:
On 06/01/2023 10:05, jason kerr wrote:
The full message is.
This site canΓ’β¬β’t be reached
192.168.1.194 took too long to respond. Try: Checking the connection
ERR_CONNECTION_TIMED_OUT
On Fri, 6 Jan 2023, 00:58 Frank Gingras, <thu...@apache.org
<mailto:thu...@apache.org>> wrote:
That error isn't helpful - show the full and unredacted error.
Also, a ping isn't a useful test.
On Thu, Jan 5, 2023 at 7:51 PM jason kerr <jjak...@gmail.com
<mailto:jjak...@gmail.com>> wrote:
I have a wood pellet boiler that is connected via ethernet
cable to my home router. I can access the boiler to perform
various functions whilst on the local LAN but not externally.
There is no way to password protect this page so I didn't want
to forward the ports and make it available for everyone. The
internal IP address of this is 192.168.1.194
To get around this I bought a raspberry pi and installed
Apache on it. The IP address of this is 192.168.1.168. I
created a simple password protected webpage with the link to
the boiler IP address and port forwarded this.Γ
I can access the Apache web server when internally on the LAN
and use the boiler control page, however I can't get the
boiler control page to display when accessing the webssever
from an external IP. I can access the webssever externally but
when I click on the boiler link it tells me that it cannot be
found.
I can also successfully ping the boiler IP address from the
raspberry pi.
Is there something I am missing ?
Have you checked if the site is enabled? I don't know what Raspberry
Pi's OS is but if it is using some form of Debian or CentOS distros then
try something like this:
# apache2ctl -S
# apachectl -S
OR
# httpd -S
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