

My conclusion is that the DMZ-function is actually usable. Goddamn! It works! The packet properly passes trough. If the Huawei would have a simple UDP & TDP forwarding, such a packet would never pass trough.ġ6:15:50.115851 IP > : ġ6:15:50.115920 IP > : ICMP host unreachable - admin prohibited, length 32 That sent a single ( -c 1) raw IP-packet ( -0) and stamped the outgoing packet a IPv6-encapsulation protocol ( -ipproto 41). I took a hping-utility for crafting raw IP-packets and ran: The host and Internet, for example, online games and meetings." in the page. Internet so that unlimited services and exchanges are provided between

It says " You can configure a computer as the DMZ host that is exposed to the However, something very similar can be achieved, it has a DMZ-setting. To repeat: to my understanding, a bridging firmware cannot be done. but since all the nice stuff (SSH and telnet) are filtered, I don't know if there are actually any services listening to those ports.
Antenne til huawei b593 4g router mac#
MAC Address: F8:3D:FF: F8:3D:FF (Huawei Technologies Co.) The reason I'd like to see them is that both BusyBox and Dropbear SSHd are very typically used in Linux-based hardware.ĭoing a port-scan from LAN-side to B593 reveals, that it has something there: It is possible, that they are using something of their own make or simply don't have a prompt or are not using Linux at all. Huawei has some GPL-components in the firmware, but they don't release BusyBox nor Dropbear source. I also did investigate if the box would be based on Linux. See an example of a transfer speed measurement Ookla. So, I'll be sticking with my B593 for a while. Using an USB-based mobile terminal such a feat could be achieved, for example my Huawei E160 gets an IP-address directly to the Linux. There literally is no chance for my router to do that via B593. In UMTS-network, the mobile terminal will negotiate a data connection and get the IP-address associated with the connection. Understandably it simply cannot be done with a mobile router. What I'd really need is a network bridge, so that my Linux-box would be the one getting a dynamically changing public IP via DHCP. My previous post about my Huawei B593 4G-router has become quite popular, so I thought to tell more about my setup.
