xAlfredx 0 Posted ... Hi,I am accessing the airvpn servers from within a university network,requiring me to connect via tcp over an http (over tcp) proxy.This means my vpn connection runs on top of two tcp connections,and is quite unstable as a result (especially under load). I did however find out recently that a few tcp ports are accessiblewithout going throught the proxy. Sadly none of the ports that cancurrently be used to connect to the airvpn servers are. Therefore I'd like to request the addition of one of the following ports:110119143389465563587993995 Regards, Alfred Quote Share this post Link to post
zhang888 1066 Posted ... Hi,From a technical point of view, except 119 (nntp) and 3389 (ms-rdp), all the ports in your list would have a verybad general implications for the entire community.All other ports are used to handle e-mail related tasks (POP,SMTP,IMAP) and opening them would flag the AirVPNentry/exit nodes as potential spam relays. Even if there is no email service listening on those ports.Many systems just try to connect to this port and see if it's open or not. You should try SSH tunnel over 22. This should work the same as 119 and 3389 for this matter.UDP on port 53 should work as well, I used it many times in restrictive environments like libraries. The actual "opening" of OpenVPN listening ports is a very trivial task, but you have to do it in a way that willnot make other systems find out easily that the host behind it is a VPN node. Or at least try to. Quote Hide zhang888's signature Hide all signatures Occasional moderator, sometimes BOFH. Opinions are my own, except when my wife disagrees. Share this post Link to post
xAlfredx 0 Posted ... Hi,I suppose not opening any of the mail ports does make sense. I still can't connect to port 22 at all, and UDP is ruled out entirely.What about ports 119 and 389 then? Quote Share this post Link to post