RE: Accept IRC DCC Send and Receive

  • From: "Richard Gadsden" <Richard.Gadsden@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "[ISAserver.org Discussion List]" <isalist@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 28 Nov 2002 13:17:58 -0000

On Tuesday, November 26, 2002 at 2:27 PM, Thomas W Shinder
<mailto:tshinder@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> On Tuesday, November 26, 2002 at 8:24 AM, Rafael Rodrigues
[mailto:lrafael@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] wrote:
>> On Tuesday, 26 November 2002 at 09:43, Thomas W Shinder
[mailto:tshinder@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] wrote:
>>> On Tuesday, November 26, 2002 at 7:37 AM, Rafael Rodrigues
[mailto:lrafael@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] wrote:
>>>>
>>>> My pc is behind an ISA server firewall. Although ISA permits the
IRC
>>>> protocol and I can use mIRC to connect to IRC servers, when I try
to
>>>> make DCC gets, ISA forbits them. I know that DCC is a passive
>>>> connection in ports 1024-5000 (the default setting of mIRC). Can
>>>> anyone tell how i can cofigure my ISA server to permit the DCC get?
>>>> Can it be done with a rule in ISA? I created a Protocol Rule to
>>>> permit inbound and outbound connection throught TCP in ports
>>>> 1024-5000 but I can receive and send DCCs.       
>>>
>>> You'll need an application filter or you need to figure out what
>>> settings are required in the mspclnt.ini file. Just curious, why
>>> can't you use SMTP or HTTP Get. Why use DCC?  
>>
>> Sorry by the duplicates messages, the ListManager reject my email
>> and I change some words and resend again. Hi Thomas! The
>> vice-president use a IRC Client called mIRC to communicate with
>> your wife (in another company) and their canot change files using DCC
>> Send/Receive and DCC Chat. He request to IT Manager to permit only
>> him do this and the IT Manager repass this request to mee. :-) It is
>> possible?    
>> 
> I'm going to tell you that its impossible until someone tells me
> otherwise :-) 

It's not impossible.

DCC Get connections are a TCP inbound connection.  What you'll need to
do
is to publish the relevant client machine (ie the PC that mIRC is
running on).

I would suggest configuring mIRC to use a restricted port range, and
then use
a server publishing rule to redirect inbound connections on those ports
to that
client machine.  Then you will probably want to put some firewall
software on
that machine to make sure that those inbound connections only go to the
mIRC
program and not to anywhere else.

Have fun!

--
Richard Gadsden
Cobbetts IT Department

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