SSH is yet another example of an ancient technology that is still in wide use today. It may very well be that learning a couple of SSH tricks is more profitable in the long run than mastering a dozen Cloud Native tools or AI agent frameworks destined to become deprecated next quarter.
One of my favorite parts of this technology is SSH Tunnels. With nothing but standard tools and often using just a single command, you can achieve the following:
- Access internal VPC endpoints through a public-facing EC2 instance.
- Open a
localhost
port of a remote development VM in the local browser. - Expose any local server from a home/private network to the outside world. Tunnel your browser's debugging port to a remote sandboxed coding agent.
And more π
But despite the fact that I use SSH Tunnels daily, it always takes me a while to recall the right command. Should it be a Local or a Remote tunnel? What are the flags? Is it a local_port:remote_port or the other way around? So, I decided to finally wrap my head around it, and it resulted in a series of labs and a visual cheat sheet.
The labs in this tutorial run on an attached playground with four hosts wired into three networks:
internal
- a device on thehome network
192.168.0.0/24
(a homelab box, a NAS, a printer). Not reachable from thepublic network.local
- your workstation. Sits on both thehome
192.168.0.0/24
and thepublic203.0.113.0/24
networks.remote
- a public-facing bastion / gateway on thepublic
203.0.113.0/24
network, also connected to a privatevpc172.16.0.0/24
.private
- an internal-only service (a database, an OpenSearch cluster) on thevpc
172.16.0.0/24
. Not reachable from thepublic network.
You can ssh
from local
to remote
by hostname or IP address - the local
host key is already trusted on the remote
machine:
ssh remote
ssh 203.0.113.30
Local Port Forwarding #
Starting from the one that I use the most.
Oftentimes, there might be a service listening on localhost
or a private interface of a remote machine that I can only SSH to via its public IP. And I desperately need to access this port from my local machine. A few typical examples:
- Accessing a private remote database (MySQL, Postgres, Redis, etc) from your laptop using your favorite UI tool.
- Using your browser to access a web application exposed only to a private network.
- Accessing a container's port from your laptop without publishing it on the server's public interface.
All of the above use cases can be solved with a single ssh
command:
ssh -L [local_addr:]local_port:remote_addr:remote_port [user@]sshd_addr
The -L
flag indicates we're starting a local port forwarding. What it actually means is:
- On your local machine, the SSH client will start listening on
local_port
(likely, onlocalhost
, butit depends-check the).GatewayPorts
setting - Any traffic to this port will be forwarded to
remote_addr:remote_port
, reached from the remote machine you SSH-ed to.
Here is what it looks like on a diagram:
Pro Tip: Use ssh -f -N -L
to run the port-forwarding session in the background.
Lab 1: Using SSH Tunnels for Local Port Forwarding π¨π¬ #
This lab reproduces the setup from the diagram above.
The remote
host runs a web server bound to 127.0.0.1:80
, and we want to reach it from the local
workstation.
Because the service is bound to the loopback interface, it cannot be reached over the network.
From the local host, try to hit the remote
host's public address:
curl 203.0.113.30:80 # remote.public
curl: (7) Failed to connect to 203.0.113.30 port 80 after 0 ms: Could not connect to server
But from the inside of the remote host, the very same service works just fine:
curl localhost:80
Hello from the remote host (localhost-only service).
And here is the trick: back on the local host,
bind the remote's localhost:80
to the local's localhost:8080
using local port forwarding:
ssh -f -N -L 8080:localhost:80 203.0.113.30
Now you can access the web service on a local port of your workstation:
curl localhost:8080
Hello from the remote host (localhost-only service).
A slightly more verbose (but more explicit and flexible) way to achieve the same goal:
ssh -f -N -L localhost:8080:localhost:80 203.0.113.30
Local Port Forwarding with a Bastion Host #
It might not be obvious at first, but the ssh -L
command allows forwarding a local port to a remote port on any machine,
not only on the SSH server itself. Notice how the remote_addr
and sshd_addr
may or may not have the same value:
ssh -L [local_addr:]local_port:remote_addr:remote_port [user@]sshd_addr
A remote SSH server used to access private destinations is usually called a bastion or jump host. This is how I visualize this scenario in my head:
I often use the above trick to call endpoints that are accessible from the bastion host but not from my laptop (e.g., using an EC2 instance with private and public interfaces to connect to an OpenSearch cluster or any other service deployed fully within a VPC).
Lab 2: Local Port Forwarding with a Bastion Host π¨π¬ #
This lab reproduces the setup from the diagram above.
The remote target service runs on the private
host inside an improvised VPC network (172.16.0.40:80
),
and the former remote
host acts as our public-facing bastion (jump host) that can reach it.
The local
workstation has no route into the VPC,
so it cannot talk to the private
host directly. From the local host:
curl --connect-timeout 3 172.16.0.40:80 # private.vpc
curl: (28) Connection timed out after 3002 milliseconds
The remote
bastion, on the other hand, is connected to the VPC and can reach the private
host. So, we forward a local port through the bastion straight to the private service. From the local host:
ssh -f -N -L 8081:172.16.0.40:80 203.0.113.30
Checking that it works - still on the local host:
curl localhost:8081
Hello from the private VPC host (172.16.0.40).
Notice that the forwarding target ( 172.16.0.40) and the SSH server (203.0.113.30) are different machines. The bastion accepts the connection and opens the second hop to the private host on our behalf.
A slightly more verbose (but more explicit and flexible) way to achieve the same goal:
ssh -f -N -L localhost:8081:172.16.0.40:80 203.0.113.30
Remote Port Forwarding #
Another popular (but rather inverse) scenario is when you want to momentarily expose a local service to the outside world. Of course, for that, you'll need a public-facing ingress gateway server. And the good news is that any public-facing server with an SSH daemon on it can be used as such a gateway:
ssh -R [remote_addr:]remote_port:local_addr:local_port [user@]gateway_addr
The above command looks no more complicated than its ssh -L
counterpart. But there is a pitfall...
By default, the above SSH tunnel will allow using only the gateway's localhost as the remote address. In other words, your local port will become accessible only from inside the gateway server itself, which is most likely not what you actually need. For instance, I typically want to use the gateway's public address as the remote address to expose my local services to the public Internet. For that, the SSH server needs to be configured with the GatewayPorts yes setting.
Here is what remote port forwarding can be used for:
- Exposing a dev service from your laptop to the public Internet for a quick demo.
- Exposing your homelab to the public Internet (for arbitrary purposes). Tunneling your local browser's debugging port to a remote and/or sandboxed coding agent.
Here is how the remote port forwarding can be visualized:
Pro Tip: Use ssh -f -N -R
to run the port-forwarding session in the background.
Lab 3: Using SSH Tunnels for Remote Port Forwarding π¨π¬ #
This lab reproduces the setup from the diagram above.
The local
workstation runs a web server bound to 127.0.0.1:80
,
and we want to expose it to the outside through the public-facing remote
gateway.
The service is bound to the loopback interface, so right now nobody but the local
machine itself can reach it. Try accessing it from the remote machine:
curl --connect-timeout 3 203.0.113.20:80 # local.public
curl: (7) Failed to connect to 203.0.113.20 port 80 after 0 ms: Could not connect to server
We want to expose it through the remote
gateway and consume it from the private
host.
The remote
gateway already has GatewayPorts yes
in its sshd_config
,
so we can ask it to listen on all of its interfaces (0.0.0.0
) and forward the traffic back to us. However, the local machine has to establish the tunnel first.
From the local host, start the remote port forwarding:
ssh -f -N -R 0.0.0.0:8080:localhost:80 203.0.113.30
Now the local web service is published on the gateway's interfaces.
Let's confirm it from a third machine - the private host,
which can reach the remote
gateway over the VPC:
curl 172.16.0.30:8080 # remote.vpc
Hello from your local workstation (localhost-only service).
Remote Port Forwarding to a Home or Private Network #
Similar to local port forwarding, remote port forwarding has its own bastion or jump host mode. But this time, the machine with the SSH client (e.g., your dev laptop) plays the role of the jump host. In particular, it allows exposing ports of a home (or private) network reachable from your laptop to the outside world through a remote SSH server acting as an ingress gateway:
ssh -R [remote_addr:]remote_port:local_addr:local_port [user@]gateway_addr
Looks almost identical to the simple remote SSH tunnel,
but the local_addr:local_port
pair becomes the address of a device in the home network. Here is how it can be depicted on a diagram:
I typically use my laptop as a thin client and the actual development happens on a remote server. Sometimes, such a remote server can reside in my home network and have no or restricted Internet access (for extra isolation). This is when I may want to rely on remote port forwarding to expose a service from a home server to the public Internet, using my laptop that can access both the internal dev server and the remote SSH server (ingress gateway) as a jump host.
Lab 4: Remote Port Forwarding from a Home/Private Network π¨π¬ #
This lab reproduces the setup from the diagram above.
The service we want to expose runs on the internal
host inside an isolated home network (192.168.0.10:80
).
Our local
workstation can reach the home network and also has SSH access to the public-facing remote
gateway, so it plays the role of a jump host.
The local
host can reach the internal
service over the home network. From the local host:
curl 192.168.0.10:80 # internal.home
Hello from the internal home-network host (192.168.0.10).
From the outside, though, the internal
device is invisible. Try accessing it from the remote host:
curl --connect-timeout 3 192.168.0.10:80 # internal.home
curl: (28) Connection timed out after 3001 milliseconds
The remote
host has no route into the home network, so the request simply times out.
Now, from the local host, start the remote port forwarding from the remote gateway to the internal device. The forwarding target (
192.168.0.10
) is resolved by the SSH client, i.e., from the local
host's point of view:
ssh -f -N -R 0.0.0.0:8081:192.168.0.10:80 203.0.113.30
Finally, validate that the home-network service became accessible on the gateway - from the private host, which reaches the gateway over the VPC:
curl 172.16.0.30:8081 # remote.vpc
Hello from the internal home-network host (192.168.0.10).
Dynamic Local Port Forwarding #
This forwarding mode is less transparent for the clients,
but it is also significantly more flexible than regular local port forwarding.
Instead of wiring a local port to a single remote destination (like ssh -L
does), dynamic (local) port forwarding turns the SSH client into a local SOCKS proxy. Any application that can speak SOCKS can then send traffic through it, choosing the actual destination host and port per connection - they will be sent over to the SSH server, which will resolve the destination and establish the connection:
ssh -D [local_addr:]local_port [user@]sshd_addr
When the -D
flag is used, the SSH client on your machine starts a SOCKS proxy listening on local_port
(on localhost
by default).
Each connection made through the proxy is forwarded to whatever address the SOCKS client asks for, reached from the sshd_addr
machine.
In other words, it's like ssh -L
, but you don't have to specify a single remote_addr:remote_port
upfront, because the SOCKS protocol allows specifying the destination at the beginning of each connection (via a few extra bytes sent right before the payload). One (local) proxied port gives you access to every host and port reachable from the (remote) SSH server.
Here is what dynamic port forwarding can be used for:
- Calling APIs in a private network through a bastion, without a separate tunnel per service.
- Browsing internal web apps in a remote network via a single jump host.
- Reaching a fleet of VPC endpoints from your laptop through one EC2 instance.
Pro Tip: Use ssh -f -N -D
to run the SOCKS proxy in the background.
Lab 5: Using SSH Tunnels for Dynamic Port Forwarding π¨π¬ #
This is the bastion scenario from Lab 2 again, except this time we won't pin the tunnel to a single destination.
First, let's make sure we cannot reach the private
destination from the local machine:
curl --connect-timeout 3 172.16.0.40:80 # private.vpc
curl: (28) Connection timed out after 3002 milliseconds
Now, on the local host, start a SOCKS proxy through the remote
host:
ssh -f -N -D 1080 203.0.113.30 # remote.public
If you point curl
at the proxy to reach the private
VPC service, the request will come through:
curl --socks5-hostname localhost:1080 172.16.0.40:80
Hello from the private VPC host (172.16.0.40).
Note that unlike with ssh -L
, the client - curl in this case - must be able to speak SOCKS (see the --socks5-hostname
flag).
The same SOCKS proxy reaches any host the remote
machine can - including a second VPC host -
without setting up a separate tunnel, try reaching the private-2
machine:
curl --socks5-hostname localhost:1080 172.16.0.50:80
Hello from the second private VPC host (172.16.0.50).
With ssh -L
, reaching both private hosts would have meant two separate tunnels (one per remote_addr:remote_port
).
A single ssh -D
proxy covers the whole network behind the bastion.
Dynamic Remote Port Forwarding #
Just like ssh -L
has a dynamic sibling in ssh -D
, the ssh -R
command has its own dynamic mode.
If you drop the fixed destination from -R
and pass only a port, OpenSSH turns the SSH server itself into a SOCKS proxy.
It's the exact mirror of -D
: this time the proxy lives on the gateway,
and every connection made through it is tunneled back to the ssh
client and resolved from its point of view:
ssh -R [bind_address:]port [user@]gateway_addr
The -R
flag with no destination means:
- On the remote gateway, the SSH server starts a SOCKS proxy listening on
port
(on the gateway'slocalhost
by default, or on all interfaces withGatewayPorts yes
). - Each connection made through the proxy is tunneled back to the
ssh
client and forwarded to whatever address the SOCKS client asks for, reached from the client's side.
It's like a regular ssh -R
, but you don't have to choose a single local_addr:local_port
upfront.
One proxy on the gateway exposes every host and port reachable from the ssh
client - for example, an entire home network.
Remote dynamic forwarding requires OpenSSH 7.6 or newer on the client.
As with a regular ssh -R
, binding the proxy to a non-loopback address on the gateway needs GatewayPorts yes
in its sshd_config
.
Pro Tip: Use ssh -f -N -R
to run the SOCKS proxy in the background.
Lab 6: Using SSH Tunnels for Remote Dynamic Port Forwarding π¨π¬ #
This is the home-network scenario from Lab 4 again -
we want to expose devices that only local
can reach through the public-facing remote
gateway - except this time a single proxy covers all of them.
First, let's make sure we cannot reach the internal
host from the private machine:
curl 192.168.0.10:80 # internal.home
curl: (7) Failed to connect to 192.168.0.10 port 80 after 0 ms: Could not connect to server
Now, from the local host, turn the remote
gateway into a SOCKS proxy, and establish a tunnel with it:
ssh -f -N -R 0.0.0.0:1080 203.0.113.30 # remote.public
To recheck the connectivity, from the private host again,
use the gateway's proxy to reach the internal
home device:
curl --socks5-hostname 172.16.0.30:1080 192.168.0.10:80
Hello from the internal home-network host (192.168.0.10).
The same proxy reaches anything the ssh
client (local
) can - including its own loopback service:
curl --socks5-hostname 172.16.0.30:1080 127.0.0.1:80
Hello from your local workstation (localhost-only service).
Summarizing #
Here is a quick recap and a couple of mnemonics to help you memorize the SSH tunneling commands:
Local port forwarding(ssh -L
) makes a remote service available on a local port.Remote port forwarding(ssh -R
) makes a local service available on a remote port.Dynamic local port forwarding(ssh -D
) turns the localssh
client into a SOCKS proxy.Dynamic remote port forwarding(ssh -R
with no destination) turns thesshd
server into a SOCKS proxy.- Local port forwarding (
ssh -L
) implies it's thessh
client that starts listening on a new port. - Remote port forwarding (
ssh -R
) implies it's thesshd
server that starts listening on an extra port. - The word local can mean either theSSH client machine or an internal host accessible from it. - The word remote can mean either theSSH server machine (sshd) or any host accessible from it. - The mnemonics are sshand**-Ll** ocal:remotesshand it's always the left-hand side that opens a new port.**-R**r** emote:local
Hope the above materials helped you a bit with becoming a master of SSH Tunnels π§
Practice #
Reinforce your learning by solving these practical challenges:
Resources #
SSH Tunneling Explainedby networking gurus from Teleport.SSH Tunneling: Examples, Command, Server Configby SSH Academy.
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