I have installed mirth connect on Cent Os machine.I can open mirth on same machine but when i try to open it from windows machine using browser i got "not able to open".
On Cent Os:-
firewall is disabled .I have checked using 'getenforce' and it is disabled.
I can ping my windows machine.
On windows:-
I can ping Cent Os machine.
but not able to open mirth connect u sing google chrome with port 8080.
thanks in advance
Actually it was due to multiple jdk's installed on cantos. as on starting of mirth connect .mirth not able to identifies which jdk should use to access connector class..
Related
Having created a Windows Azure VM and opened ports 3389 and 22 for inbound RDP and SSH connections, respectively.
I can successfully connect to the vm via RDP from a remote Windows PC.
Testing SSH connection in the Portal succeeds. However trying to connect from a remote Linux VM using SSH fails.
Given that SSH connection test within the portal succeeds, it suggests that (1) it is possible to SSH into a windows VM; and (2) there is no other config require on the server ie installing OpenSSH (or similar) / Copying over key file(s) to some location etc. However, the help steps in the Azure Portal for my Windows VM, for making remote SSH connections suggest that maybe a public key needs to exist on the server and that I need the private key on the LinuxVM I am trying to connect from.
Please could someone help me understand if ssh into windows Azure VM is possible and if so, the requirements / minimum set of steps (on the target Windows VM and the source Linux VM) I need to get to a state that I can successfully SSH.
Other posts re similar question posted have not helped me connect via ssh. I have not found a 'golden source of truth' on Microsoft docs. Maybe I missed it.
Thank you.
A Windows Server doesn’t typically come pre-built and ready to go with SSH access and it requires some setup. You can follow this to set up your Azure VM for SSH access. You can configure SSH on a Windows Azure VM for access, check out How to Set Up OpenSSH on a Windows Server. After deploying the OpenSSH, you can follow the steps about connect via SSH with client in the Azure portal on your Linux client to access that Windows VM via SSH.
Scenario:
Windows 10 Virtual Machine hosted using Parallels on MacOS Catalina
Azure VPN - Basic SKU
Shared Network setup using Parallels
I can successfully connect to the Azure VPN using a Point-to-site connection from the Windows 10 installation.
Problem: I would like to use the VPN connection (established by Windows 10 VM) with macOS Host. Is this possible?
I have tried adding a static route on Mac OS as below, where 10.200.0.0/16 is the Azure Network CIDR, and 10.211.55.6 is the IP address of the Windows 10 VM on Parallels.
sudo route add -net 10.200.0.0/16 10.211.55.6
But this does not work. Any suggestions, or is there no way to share the VPN connection even with custom routing configuration?
Note. I understand that you can connect to Azure VPN from MacOS using the Standard SKU of Azure VPN, but would like to see if it is possible without.
I have the following configuration:
Windows 7 Enterprise x64 Host running VMWare Workstation v11.0.0 build 2305329
Client (VM) is Windows Server 2008 r2 x64
Symantec Endpoint Protection client (unmanaged) v12.1.5337.5000
using Collabnet Subversion Edge v5.0.1-4144.7
I can connect to subversion's admin port of 3343/4434 from the host computer, however when attempting to connect to the client from two external servers, I get page cannot be displayed. I can connect to the default web port of 80 and get the default IIS 7 page.
I think this may be a firewall configuration situation, however I have tried opening all tcp/udp ports in both windows firewall rules and SEP rules and I still am unable to connect.
I might be able to get it working if I install TFS on port 8080 and uninstall TFS. But I really would rather not.
Check the Advanced/Profiles section of the firewall rule for "CollabNet Subversion Edge Console". This defaults to Public but you many need Domain and/or Private too.
i create a win2012r2 datacenter vm on azure. i'm trying to connect via RDC but rdc cannot connect. i use the rdp file that azure provide, and also tryied to do it by myself manually in rdc (dns:port and also ip:port) but still i can't connect. how to check where the problem is?
Thanks
Are you in a Crop. network? I means did you check the firewall settings on your side? And kindly reminder, the default RDC port is NOT 3389.
My local machine is using MacOSX/linux and am able to connect to a Windows Remote Desktop machine (using Windows Remote Desktop/Remote Desktop Connection).
The Windows Remote Desktop machine is able to connect to certain servers that I cannot connect to locally on my MAC. For example, connection to database servers, specific web servers, etc.
How can I setup some kind of tunnel so that I can access the servers locally on my mac?
You can configure port forwarding on the Windows machine
netsh interface portproxy add v4tov4 listenport=3390 listenaddress=192.168.1.111 connectport=3389 connectaddress=192.168.0.33
where 192.168.1.111 is IP of your Windows machine and 192.168.0.33 is destination server. From your Mac you will connect to Windows machine specifying port in RDP connection 192.168.1.111:3390 and you will be connected to the remote server. You have to provide credentials from the server, not your local Win machine. This configuration survive restarting Windows machine.
Just install Igiko on your windows machine and then open it in web browser on your MacOSX. Igiko is acting like web-based RDP gateway, using it you will be able to open RDP console to any Windows machine in your network.