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Hey guys, I have a Raspberry Pi running Tshock. All ports are configured to 7777. Port forwarding is enabled on my router and the port is open (verified with yougetsignal.com). When verifying if the port is open, an entry pops up in the TShock console (198.199.98.246:47893 is connecting...). Does someone have any ideas on what I can do to troubleshoot further? Port forwarding configuration: Raspberry Pi 4 - Raspbian Buster |
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You say "connecting with my public IP won't work. I don't even get a 'IP is connecting...' message in the server console" and then you say "When verifying if the port is open, an entry pops up in the TShock console (198.199.98.246:47893 is connecting...)" This verifies that the port forwarding is set up correctly since the port testing website is able to ping and reach all the way to the Tshock executable running on your Pi. My guess is that your ISP disallows hosting a web server and has some prevention mechanism to keep other people's public IPs from pinging you. The reason the port test website might have worked is that the IP might be whitelisted as part of AWS, Google Cloud, Azure, etc. In other words, it might be that your ISP blocks direct traffic from the IP of your cell phone's hotspot, or the public IP of your friend's computer. I've had this issue myself in the past, and had to find a different internet provider to work around this. Another option would be to use some sort of a proxy service, or host the server cheaply in the cloud. Can you share how you tried to test connecting to your public IP? Cell phone hotspot, public library, etc? |
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You say "connecting with my public IP won't work. I don't even get a 'IP is connecting...' message in the server console" and then you say "When verifying if the port is open, an entry pops up in the TShock console (198.199.98.246:47893 is connecting...)"
This verifies that the port forwarding is set up correctly since the port testing website is able to ping and reach all the way to the Tshock executable running on your Pi.
My guess is that your ISP disallows hosting a web server and has some prevention mechanism to keep other people's public IPs from pinging you. The reason the port test website might have worked is that the IP might be whitelisted as part of AWS, Google Cloud, Azure, e…