On Wednesday, September 26, 2012 12:43:58 esolve esolve wrote:
Hi, thanks for the instruction. I'm using an external IP, not a private one
I think nc -lp is used for listening on a specified port, however, on my machine I tried
--------------------------- bash-4.2$ nc -l -p 3355 usage: nc [-46CDdhklnrStUuvz] [-I length] [-i interval] [-O length] [-P proxy_username] [-p source_port] [-s source] [-T ToS] [-V rtable] [-w timeout] [-X proxy_protocol] [-x proxy_address[:port]] [destination] [port]
bash-4.2$ nc -lp 3355 usage: nc [-46CDdhklnrStUuvz] [-I length] [-i interval] [-O length] [-P proxy_username] [-p source_port] [-s source] [-T ToS] [-V rtable] [-w timeout] [-X proxy_protocol] [-x proxy_address[:port]] [destination] [port]
it seems that this command doesn't work
try "nc -l 3355". I ran nc on DragonFly with "-lp". On Linux I get "This is nc from the netcat-openbsd package. An alternative nc is available in the netcat- traditional package." and it doesn't like "-lp". The number 3355 is an example; try various numbers.
I have no idea on "primer.example.com" and I cant open it in browser can you explain it a bit? thanks!
example.com is used as an example of a hostname or domain name. I have no idea what your Tor box's name is, so I used primer.example.com. ("primer" is Slavic for "example".)
cmeclax