I want to know if is there a way to make my rabbitmq public, so that i can interact with him in remote computers.
In localhost, the rabbitmq is open in port 15672, but not 5672.
I've open port 15672 in firewall, and try to interact it with my public id, but it failed.
Is there a way to make my rabbitmq public for remote computers?
Maybe there's a problem with port 5672 that i need to fix?
guidance will be great.
I'm using windows 7 64-bit.
Thank you.
Related
I hope someone can point me in the right direction.
I have a Windows Server 2012R2 running Bitvise SSH server, for the sake of simplicity it has only one ethernet card. SSH listens to 192.168.1.115 port 22.
When the server is connected to the internet with VPN (NordVPN client > I cannot edit config) the SSH connection is no longer working. I believe this is very normal as the VPN changes the gateway and routes all, including SSH, packages through it.
I was hoping it is possible to simply edit the routing table or similar so that all SSH packages on 192.168.1.115 port 22 are routed to the original gateway (the gateway before VPN is connected so to speak) and that all other are routed via the VPN gateway.
Alas, I have no idea how to start with this split tunneling. Maybe there are tools or other solution for this? I have search high and low but did not find an easy answer.
Looking really forward to your expertise. Thank you.
With best regards,
ShadowHunter
I have hosted web application (developed in PHP) on Amazon EC2 micro instance. As per default setting, i can access 80, 22, 443 and 3306 ports from remote locations means from Home(terminal window) using telnet command.
I want to open another custom TCP port XXXXX. I have added that port in Security Group. when i am trying to connect that port through telnet command it is always show "Connection refused".
I have been trying to solve this issue for 3 days but could not get successful solution.
Help would be really appreciated.
Thanks
Adding a port in security group (inbound) ensures that the port can be accessed from outside. Please check following
Is the port open for anywhere (0.0.0.0/0) or for a custom IP. If for custom IP, please check the IP of your machine (search 'what is my ip' on google).
Is there any application listening on the port on EC2 machine.
I'm being in a tough spot, having created 2 different virtual machines on Azure, with windows server 2012 R2 OS. I'm trying to host a game server for a game, which requires ports 7777 and 27015 opened.
What I did is simple, I went into the panel, set-up endpoints for 7777, 27015, for UDP and TCP, and added exceptions to firewall as well for incoming/outcoming 7777, 27015 TCP and UDP.
canyouseeme.org still apparently can't find my service and shows me the ports are not opened. It shows my remote connection port is opened though. What am I doing wrong? Is there anything more that I need to know?
Image showing forwarded ports
If you opened the ports on your Firewall and on the Endpoints screen you are probably fine to game. The problem is probably with the utility that you're testing with and not the ports themselves.
I logged onto an Azure VM that I know I can remotely connect to, tested an open port that I know is open with that website, and it said it did not find it. Maybe that site is using Ping, which gets stuck in Azure's load balancer. To test connectivity, try using PSPing. This will let you test connections to specific ports. https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb896649
I am having difficulty getting Confluence running on windows server 2012 on port 80. (the machine in hosted in Azure which is why I need to run it on port 80 (i dont have access to other ports from where I am trying to use this)).
I believe something must be running on port 80 , though i did a netstat -y and didnt see anything.
I think its IIS any idea how I should kill that or what else could be causing confluence to not run on port 80?
*confluence works find on say port 8090 but i need to run it on port 80.
mind you I cant get confluence to run on port 80 on the local instance of windows server, never mind accessing it from another location thus i dont think this has anything to do with azure
running a
netstat -abn
shows nothing running on port 80. Im still not sure why I cant get confluence to work locally on port 80.
A virtual machine in Azure is not directly public accessible. You need to configure endpoints in the cloudservice (which acts as a loadbalancer).
So for instance you can configure a public endpoint port 80 on the cloudservice to point to your VM port 8090. See http://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/documentation/articles/virtual-machines-set-up-endpoints/ for more information.
If the Endpoint is open on Azure to the VM then my advice would be to check the firewall settings on the host. Typically most ports are shut unless they are explicitly opened by installing a feature like IIS (windows web server).
I will be building a server/client software on Windows, where many machines need to communicate with a Postresql database running on the server. This is C++ software so I will use libpq to connect to the database.
If I do this, will there be issues with the firewall? I'd like to make configuration as easy as possible and not have users open up firewall ports or disable their firewall.
If I do need to open up firewall ports, can I use WCF to get around the issue? Basically send a command to the server using WCF, run the postgresql command locally, and get the result back (I have never used WCF but understand that it can communication using HTTP port 80).
PostgreSQL typically listens on port 5432, which is not open by default in the Windows firewall. But the only machine where the firewall would need to be re-configured is the one where PostgreSQL is running. If you have many client machines, none of them should require firewall changes (unless they have restrictions on outbound traffic, which is rare).
Hope this helps.
You can also configure SSL connections to ensure better security.