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    Port 443 open

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved NAT
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    • G
      grasshopper645
      last edited by

      Confirmed modem is not allowing port 443, and added a block of port 443 to the firewall. Port is still open lol. Could my ISP be doing something?

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        doktornotor Banned
        last edited by

        Post a screenshot of WAN rules on pfSense.

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        • G
          grasshopper645
          last edited by

          Here are the wan rules..This is very strange. I am thinking of re-installing pfsense to see if that makes a difference?

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            doktornotor Banned
            last edited by

            That won't make any difference, plus definitely not convinced that 404 comes from pfSense. "The requested resource is not found" is either IIS or Tomcat error message. Not lighttpd. When you go to a non-existent page on pfSense GUI, you get plain "404 - Not Found".

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            • G
              grasshopper645
              last edited by

              I'll bypass pfsense with a standard home-based router tonight and see weather the port is still open. I agree with you - I doubt that message is coming from pfsense. I must admit I am a little concerned maybe the server has been compromised

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              • G
                grasshopper645
                last edited by

                It's definitely pfsense keeping port 443 open. I have put the modem non-bridging mode and the port is closed. Could some glitch in pfsense be causing this? I'm at a loss as to what to do DX

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                  doktornotor Banned
                  last edited by

                  Already suggested to do a packet capture. Then there are firewall logs. As for hunting ghosts, no, no suggestions. Produce some information to work with. https://ip_ommited and a 404 that clearly does not come from pfSense is not useful. Did you enable some UPnP junk?

                  :(

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                  • M
                    muswellhillbilly
                    last edited by

                    A thought: Just to double-check, where are you hitting 'ip omitted' from? Are you pointing to the ip address from a machine inside your network or from outside?

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                    • G
                      grasshopper645
                      last edited by

                      @doktornotor:

                      Already suggested to do a packet capture. Then there are firewall logs. As for hunting ghosts, no, no suggestions. Produce some information to work with. https://ip_ommited and a 404 that clearly does not come from pfSense is not useful. Did you enable some UPnP junk?

                      :(

                      Yep you were correct!!!

                      I very much appreciate your persistance in replying, despite my ignorance/vague replies. You have saved me a lot of grief!!!

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                      • G
                        grasshopper645
                        last edited by

                        @muswellhillbilly:

                        A thought: Just to double-check, where are you hitting 'ip omitted' from? Are you pointing to the ip address from a machine inside your network or from outside?

                        I manually wrote 'ip omitted' as i didnt want the public internet knowing what my IP address is. It was a public address for what its worth. Cheers.

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                        • G
                          grasshopper645
                          last edited by

                          I understand if no one replies to this - (unrelated) but could someone please explain why Windows Media player requires https port forwarded? cheers.

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                            doktornotor Banned
                            last edited by

                            You need to ask MS. Please, disable or at least severely restrict the UPnP access, there are some examples in the GUI. Very dangerous without any restrictions.

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                              muswellhillbilly
                              last edited by

                              According to MS it's to do with performance: http://windows.microsoft.com/en-gb/windows7/stream-your-media-over-the-internet-using-windows-media-player. Though this is really a question for a different forum.

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                                doktornotor Banned
                                last edited by

                                @muswellhillbilly:

                                According to MS it's to do with performance: http://windows.microsoft.com/en-gb/windows7/stream-your-media-over-the-internet-using-windows-media-player.

                                Ah of course, who gives a fuck about security, performance is much more important in the MS land; plus it's extremely excellent idea to steal standard HTTPS port for some media streaming junk.  :o ???

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                                  muswellhillbilly
                                  last edited by

                                  Before I found the article, I gamely wondered if MS might have been using 443 to encrypt the data. Hardy-har-har!

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                                  • G
                                    grasshopper645
                                    last edited by

                                    @doktornotor:

                                    @muswellhillbilly:

                                    According to MS it's to do with performance: http://windows.microsoft.com/en-gb/windows7/stream-your-media-over-the-internet-using-windows-media-player.

                                    Ah of course, who gives a fuck about security, performance is much more important in the MS land; plus it's extremely excellent idea to steal standard HTTPS port for some media streaming junk.  :o ???

                                    lol..so true!

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