On Tue, Jan 20, 2026 at 10:43:34AM +0300, Washington Odhiambo wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 19, 2026 at 8:08???PM Crystal Kolipe <kolipe.c@exoticsilicon.com>
> wrote:
> > The problem is probably not with PF, but something else.
> >
>
> I haven't manipulated anything at all. It's a fresh OpenBSD install.
Have you checked the configuration on the host?
From the information you have supplied so far, the configuration of the
OpenBSD client seems to be correct.
> Your suggested commands show that it is running and listening on all
> interfaces for IPv4 and IPv6.
OK, so it seems that:
* PF is currently disabled, so this is not the source of the problem.
* SSHd is running and listening on all interfaces.
* Your ifconfig output looks correct.
* Your routing table looks correct.
* The OpenBSD vm is using 192.168.69.22
* The host is using 192.168.69.1
* You are able to ping the host from within the OpenBSD vm
* You are able to ping other hosts on the internet from within the OpenBSD vm
* Therefore ICMP traffic is correctly being routed out of and back to the
OpenBSD vm.
* You are assigning the IP address to the OpenBSD via DHCP, (rather than
setting a fixed address.)
If this is all correct, I would now check:
* Is TCP traffic being routed out of and back to the OpenBSD vm:
openbsd# ftp -o -https://www.openbsd.org/
* Can you connect to an arbitrary high port that is listening on the OpenBSD vm
from the host:
openbsd# nc -l 192.168.69.22 2000
host$ telnet 192.168.69.22 2000
As PF is currently disabled, you should be able to connect to port 2000
without any additional configuration.
No comments:
Post a Comment