PortProxy

From Moonlight Design
Revision as of 06:12, 11 May 2008 by Stevenlawrance (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
PortProxy 95 -- the Windows 95 version -- running in the system tray using Wine on Novell openSUSE 10.2. PortProxy is the icon closest to the right, next to the clock

PortProxy is a TCP connection forwarding service that I wrote in college so that I could run servers from behind a firewall. When I put Linux onto resnet.bryant.edu, I no longer needed this program, but it's still cool if you are running Windows. I also wrote a version that runs as a system tray application in Windows 95.

Download

Configuration

PortProxy stores its configuration in the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\PortProxy\Parameters registry key. It can be dynamically configured using a command line interface via a localhost telnet connection to port 256.

When connected to the configuration command line interface, the following commands can be used. Each command is terminated with a newline character. Responses from the server begin with either a plus sign (+) for a positive response or a minus sign (-) for a negative response, similar to DirList Server's protocol.

Command Parameters Meaning
+ port intaddr intport 6 Adds a forwarded port
  • port: The local port that you want PortProxy to listen on
  • intaddr: The internal IPv4 address that you want PortProxy to connect to when new connections on the local listening port are established
  • intport: The port number on the internal address that you want PortProxy to connect to when new connections on the local listening port are established
  • 6: This is the internet protocol type. The number six is the constant for TCP. UDP is not supported, though code for it exists as I was trying to make it work
- port Removes a forwarded port
  • port: The local port to remove that PortProxy is listening on
s port Returns whether or not the given local port is being forwarded by PortProxy
  • port: The local port to examine
t port Tests a local port for use by PortProxy or another application
  • port: The local port to examine
x Closes PortProxy
n No operation (no-op)