Reputation: 7717
I have to implement a reverse tunnel from client to server. I have used JSCH with the following command
session.setPortForwardingR(rport, lhost, lport);
and it works (see also Reverse SSH tunnel with JSCH Java)!
next I have to tunnel my ssh session over an HTTPS stream 2-way authenticated:
client -> firewall -> apache https -> ssh server ----------------------> HTTPS ====================================> SSH ---------------------->
I'm looking for
possible solution:
## Load the required modules. LoadModule proxy_http_module modules/mod_proxy_http.so LoadModule proxy_connect_module modules/mod_proxy_connect.so ## Listen on port 8443 (in addition to other ports like 80 or 443) Listen 8443 <VirtualHost *:8443> ServerName youwebserver:8443 DocumentRoot /some/path/maybe/not/required ServerAdmin [email protected] ## Only ever allow incoming HTTP CONNECT requests. ## Explicitly deny other request types like GET, POST, etc. ## This tells Apache to return a 403 Forbidden if this virtual ## host receives anything other than an HTTP CONNECT. RewriteEngine On RewriteCond %{REQUEST_METHOD} !^CONNECT [NC] RewriteRule ^/(.*)$ - [F,L] ## Setup proxying between youwebserver:8443 and yoursshserver:22 ProxyRequests On ProxyBadHeader Ignore ProxyVia Full ## IMPORTANT: The AllowCONNECT directive specifies a list ## of port numbers to which the proxy CONNECT method may ## connect. For security, only allow CONNECT requests ## bound for port 22. AllowCONNECT 22 ## IMPORTANT: By default, deny everyone. If you don't do this ## others will be able to connect to port 22 on any host. <Proxy *> Order deny,allow Deny from all </Proxy> ## Now, only allow CONNECT requests bound for kolich.com ## Should be replaced with yoursshserver.com or the hostname ## of whatever SSH server you're trying to connect to. Note ## that ProxyMatch takes a regular expression, so you can do ## things like (kolich\.com|anothersshserver\.com) if you want ## to allow connections to multiple destinations. <ProxyMatch (kolich\.com)> Order allow,deny Allow from all </ProxyMatch> ## Logging, always a good idea. LogLevel warn ErrorLog logs/yourwebserver-proxy_error_log CustomLog logs/yourwebserver-proxy_request_log combined </VirtualHost>
Upvotes: 8
Views: 2861
Reputation: 375
The solution proposed by yourself is ok it is based on Implement HTTPS tunneling with JSSE I think.
the basic steps are:
"CONNECT " + host + ":" + port
on server side catch all request calling the "CONNECT" and enable 22 SSH port.
But you have also to consider the following issues:
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 7717
Unfortunatly no any one has tried to reply; I found the solution.
The solution is based on the HTTP 1.1 CONNECT
command and doesn't support direct tunnel.
// Install the all-trusting trust manager final SSLContext sc = SSLContext.getInstance("SSL"); sc.init(null, trustAllCerts, new java.security.SecureRandom()); JSch jsch = new JSch(); Session session = jsch.getSession("root", "SSH-server", 22); session.setSocketFactory(new SocketFactory() { Socket tunnel = null; public Socket createSocket(String host, int port) throws IOException, UnknownHostException { SSLSocketFactory ssf = sc.getSocketFactory(); // HTTP tunnel = ssf.createSocket(System.getProperty("https.proxyHost"), Integer.getInteger("https.proxyPort")); tunnel.setKeepAlive(true); doTunnelHandshake(tunnel, host, port); System.out.println(tunnel + " connect " + tunnel.isConnected()); return tunnel; // dummy } public InputStream getInputStream(Socket socket) throws IOException { System.out.println(tunnel + " getInputStream " + socket.isConnected()); return tunnel.getInputStream(); } public OutputStream getOutputStream(Socket socket) throws IOException { System.out.println("getOutputStream"); return socket.getOutputStream(); } }); session.connect(); try { session.setPortForwardingR(3391, "localhost", 3389); ....
where
private static void doTunnelHandshake(Socket tunnel, String host, int port) throws IOException { OutputStream out = tunnel.getOutputStream(); String msg = "CONNECT " + host + ":" + port + " HTTP/1.0\n" + "User-Agent: " + sun.net.www.protocol.http.HttpURLConnection.userAgent + "\r\n\r\n"; byte b[]; try { b = msg.getBytes("ASCII7"); } catch (UnsupportedEncodingException ignored) { /* * If ASCII7 isn't there, something serious is wrong, but Paranoia * Is Good (tm) */ b = msg.getBytes(); } out.write(b); out.flush(); /* * We need to store the reply so we can create a detailed error message * to the user. */ byte reply[] = new byte[200]; int replyLen = 0; int newlinesSeen = 0; boolean headerDone = false; /* Done on first newline */ InputStream in = tunnel.getInputStream(); boolean error = false; while (newlinesSeen < 2) { int i = in.read(); if (i < 0) { throw new IOException("Unexpected EOF from proxy"); } if (i == '\n') { headerDone = true; ++newlinesSeen; } else if (i != '\r') { newlinesSeen = 0; if (!headerDone && replyLen < reply.length) { reply[replyLen++] = (byte) i; } } } /* * Converting the byte array to a string is slightly wasteful in the * case where the connection was successful, but it's insignificant * compared to the network overhead. */ String replyStr; try { replyStr = new String(reply, 0, replyLen, "ASCII7"); } catch (UnsupportedEncodingException ignored) { replyStr = new String(reply, 0, replyLen); } System.out.println(replyStr); /* We asked for HTTP/1.0, so we should get that back */ if (!replyStr.startsWith("HTTP/1.0 200")) { throw new IOException("Unable to tunnel for " + host + ":" + port + ". Proxy returns \"" + replyStr + "\""); } /* tunneling Handshake was successful! */ }
add the ssl support
SSLEngine on SSLCertificateFile "conf/ssl.crt/server.crt" SSLCertificateKeyFile "conf/ssl.key/server.key"
here the result
Connecting to localhost port 22
HTTP/1.0 200 Connection Established
....
Authentications that can continue: password
Next authentication method: password
Authentication succeeded (password).
Connected
Upvotes: 2