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lukoie2015-01-12 15:12:20
Computer networks
lukoie, 2015-01-12 15:12:20

How to tunnel traffic?

I'm interested in how you can make a tunnel (and if possible, then TOR) for Teamviewer.
In order not to be so simple, they say, here is the process, here is the IP - we block it on the router and hello.
I would like to just have traffic on port 80, and there was no way to block Timviewer.

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4 answer(s)
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Artem @Jump, 2015-01-12
curated by the

I didn’t understand anything what routers and blocking have to do with it ...
Do you need a tunnel? And send only teamviewer traffic to this tunnel? Or something different?

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Evgeny Ferapontov, 2015-01-12
@e1ferapontov

Well, where do you want to tunnel the traffic? You do not give any information about what you have outside the corporate network.
Find a free VPN service to your liking (FrootVPN seems to be nothing), install OpenVPN on the machine, wrap all traffic to *.teamviewer.com *.dyngate.com (you can find the IP address blocks of these resources in Google yourself) into a VPN tunnel. You can generally turn all traffic there, but it will look oh so suspicious for the IT department.
You will wrap (if the machine is under Windows) using the route command line utility: 24ee9840c16345a5a1932478463dc86d.PNG
This will have to be done on the command line with administrator rights, as well as installing OpenVPN, among other things.
PS Teamviewer normally jumps to port 80 or 443 if its port (5938) is blocked, by the way.

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Matvey Kukuy, 2015-01-12
@Matvey-Kuk

ssh can make tricky tunnels from any to any port, including reverse ones

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Ivan, 2015-01-13
@t3mp

If you only need to drive the process (TV) into the tunnel: SocksChain, SocksCap, etc.

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