Note: This fork of sshuttle fixes a bug which caused sshuttle to crash
on startup when the --seed-hosts option was used. It also includes a
change to add FQDNs to /etc/hosts when using --seed-hosts.
As far as I know, sshuttle is the only program that solves the following common case:
- Your client machine (or router) is Linux, FreeBSD, or MacOS.
- You have access to a remote network via ssh.
- You don't necessarily have admin access on the remote network.
- The remote network has no VPN, or only stupid/complex VPN protocols (IPsec, PPTP, etc). Or maybe you are the admin and you just got frustrated with the awful state of VPN tools.
- You don't want to create an ssh port forward for every single host/port on the remote network.
- You hate openssh's port forwarding because it's randomly slow and/or stupid.
- You can't use openssh's PermitTunnel feature because it's disabled by default on openssh servers; plus it does TCP-over-TCP, which has terrible performance (see below).
Clone:
git clone https://github.com/MonsantoCo/sshuttle.git cd sshuttle sudo ./setup.py install
It is also possible to install into a virtualenv as a non-root user.
Clone:
virtualenv -p python3 /tmp/sshuttle . /tmp/sshuttle/bin/activate git clone https://github.com/MonsantoCo/sshuttle.git cd sshuttle ./setup.py install
The documentation for the stable version is available at: http://sshuttle.readthedocs.org/
The documentation for the latest development version is available at: http://sshuttle.readthedocs.org/en/latest/