<html><head><style type='text/css'>p { margin: 0; }</style></head><body><div style='font-family: Arial; font-size: 12pt; color: #000000'>Thanks for the reply David. To address your questions in order:<br><br>When I try to connect from the Win7 system, whether via browser or SSH, I'm using the IP address rather than the hostname.<br><br>The suggestion to telnet to that machine & port was a good one, I hadn't remembered that trick. After configuring PuTTY appropriately, here's the output that it returned:<br><br> get<br> HTTP/1.0 400 Bad Request<br> Server: MiniServ/1.620<br> Date: <datestring><br> Content-type: text/html; Charset=iso-8859-1<br> Connection: close<br><br> <h1>Error - Bad Request</h1><br><br>So - it *seems* that I'm not being blocked by any kind of firewall, & perhaps I should shift my attention to the application itself...<br><br>Thanks again for the reply!<br><br>T.<br><hr id="zwchr"><b>From: </b>"David L. Anselmi" <anselmi@anselmi.us><br><b>To: </b>"CLUE's mailing list" <clue@cluedenver.org><br><b>Sent: </b>Saturday, February 9, 2013 5:54:34 PM<br><b>Subject: </b>Re: [clue] Can't connect to Webmin<br><br>foo7775@comcast.net wrote:<br>><br>> I am able to SSH from the Win7 desktop to the CentOS VM using PuTTY, login& all other functions<br>> behave as expected;<br><br>Did you use the same host name for SSH and HTTP (obviously for HTTP you have to specify the port <br>correctly too)?<br><br>> PORT STATE SERVICE VERSION<br>> 10000/tcp open http MiniServ 1.620 (Webmin httpd)<br>> |_http-favicon: Unknown favicon MD5: 9A2006C267DE04E262669D821B57EAD1<br>> |_http-git: 0<br>> |_http-methods: No Allow or Public header in OPTIONS response (status code 200)<br>> | http-robots.txt: 1 disallowed entry<br>> |_/<br>> |_http-title: Login to Webmin<br>> | ndmp-version:<br>> |_ ERROR: Failed to get host information from server<br>><br>> To *me*, it still feels like there's a firewall in the mix somewhere (although the 'http-title:<br>> Login to Webmin' output above would *seem* to argue against that). Since I'm not too familiar<br>> with iptables, is it possible that it's still affecting the situation? What am I<br>> forgetting/overlooking?<br><br>You could still have iptables rules active (stopping the service doesn't necessarily unblock all the <br>ports). But I doubt it. See what telnet tells you if you do a get from the Windows 7 box.<br><br>Dave_______________________________________________<br>clue mailing list: clue@cluedenver.org<br>For information, account preferences, or to unsubscribe see:<br>http://cluedenver.org/mailman/listinfo/clue<br></div></body></html>