How to open telnet port in wireless D-Link router?












0














I want to access D-Link DIR-600L wireless router via terminal. Can i do this by opening telnet port. How to open telnet port in wireless routers?










share|improve this question
























  • If the router really supports telnet (or some other remote terminal access), you should be able to find the answer to your question on the user's manual.
    – Larssend
    Jul 1 '15 at 9:55






  • 1




    Apparently you can with some kind of hack whether it's advisable or not I don't know spect.cl/blog/2011/12/d-link-dir-600-command-injection
    – barlop
    Jul 1 '15 at 9:58










  • As mentioned by quannt you should be able to enable this via the web interface but you should avoid Telnet as it is not secure. SSH is a much better option.
    – mk444
    Jan 11 '16 at 4:39
















0














I want to access D-Link DIR-600L wireless router via terminal. Can i do this by opening telnet port. How to open telnet port in wireless routers?










share|improve this question
























  • If the router really supports telnet (or some other remote terminal access), you should be able to find the answer to your question on the user's manual.
    – Larssend
    Jul 1 '15 at 9:55






  • 1




    Apparently you can with some kind of hack whether it's advisable or not I don't know spect.cl/blog/2011/12/d-link-dir-600-command-injection
    – barlop
    Jul 1 '15 at 9:58










  • As mentioned by quannt you should be able to enable this via the web interface but you should avoid Telnet as it is not secure. SSH is a much better option.
    – mk444
    Jan 11 '16 at 4:39














0












0








0







I want to access D-Link DIR-600L wireless router via terminal. Can i do this by opening telnet port. How to open telnet port in wireless routers?










share|improve this question















I want to access D-Link DIR-600L wireless router via terminal. Can i do this by opening telnet port. How to open telnet port in wireless routers?







router telnet






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jul 26 '16 at 19:06









Hennes

58.8k792141




58.8k792141










asked Jul 1 '15 at 9:42









Mmh

111




111












  • If the router really supports telnet (or some other remote terminal access), you should be able to find the answer to your question on the user's manual.
    – Larssend
    Jul 1 '15 at 9:55






  • 1




    Apparently you can with some kind of hack whether it's advisable or not I don't know spect.cl/blog/2011/12/d-link-dir-600-command-injection
    – barlop
    Jul 1 '15 at 9:58










  • As mentioned by quannt you should be able to enable this via the web interface but you should avoid Telnet as it is not secure. SSH is a much better option.
    – mk444
    Jan 11 '16 at 4:39


















  • If the router really supports telnet (or some other remote terminal access), you should be able to find the answer to your question on the user's manual.
    – Larssend
    Jul 1 '15 at 9:55






  • 1




    Apparently you can with some kind of hack whether it's advisable or not I don't know spect.cl/blog/2011/12/d-link-dir-600-command-injection
    – barlop
    Jul 1 '15 at 9:58










  • As mentioned by quannt you should be able to enable this via the web interface but you should avoid Telnet as it is not secure. SSH is a much better option.
    – mk444
    Jan 11 '16 at 4:39
















If the router really supports telnet (or some other remote terminal access), you should be able to find the answer to your question on the user's manual.
– Larssend
Jul 1 '15 at 9:55




If the router really supports telnet (or some other remote terminal access), you should be able to find the answer to your question on the user's manual.
– Larssend
Jul 1 '15 at 9:55




1




1




Apparently you can with some kind of hack whether it's advisable or not I don't know spect.cl/blog/2011/12/d-link-dir-600-command-injection
– barlop
Jul 1 '15 at 9:58




Apparently you can with some kind of hack whether it's advisable or not I don't know spect.cl/blog/2011/12/d-link-dir-600-command-injection
– barlop
Jul 1 '15 at 9:58












As mentioned by quannt you should be able to enable this via the web interface but you should avoid Telnet as it is not secure. SSH is a much better option.
– mk444
Jan 11 '16 at 4:39




As mentioned by quannt you should be able to enable this via the web interface but you should avoid Telnet as it is not secure. SSH is a much better option.
– mk444
Jan 11 '16 at 4:39










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















0















  1. Login to the web interface.

  2. You can access shell terminal using: 192.168.0.1/shell.asp where 192.168.0.1 is your IP address of Wi-Fi router.

  3. In the shell terminal you type: telnetd.sh and press Apply.

  4. Using telnet client in your PC and type telnet 192.168.0.1 and you can see login prompt.


But I can’t find any information to login by root. Router say login incorrect when I type root in login prompt.






share|improve this answer























  • This is decent info, but the last part of your answer reads like a new question. It might be best if you post a new question referencing this question that asks what login credentials you should be using.
    – JakeGould
    Jan 11 '16 at 4:14










  • thank, but i think if someone know answer when search this question, i can get the solution in fastest way.
    – quannt
    Jan 25 '16 at 2:36










  • Try admin, else, since it's likely the information would be covered somewhere by an OpenWrt or DD-WRT user, I'd recommend doing some research on OpenWrt and DD-WRT's sites, wikis, or forums if either supports the device, as well as through google.
    – JW0914
    Aug 6 '18 at 4:27





















0














First of all, don't use telnet - just don't if you can avoid it. Buy a copy of Michael W. Lucas "SSH Mastery 2nd Edition" (which is actually quite approachable) and read it. Telnet is not encrypted (and also has way less functionality than OpenSSH)!



If you want to use telnet anyway:




  1. Login to the web interface with Your credentials.

  2. If you use Windows, open cmd.exe from start. (Windows+R type cmd and press Enter)

  3. Write telnet <YOUR ROUTERS IP HERE> e.g. like telnet 192.168.0.100

  4. Login as admin and write Your password.


Your D-Link DIR-600L Router has most likely many security vulnerabilities. Please do the internet community a favor and upgrade to a supported operating system like OpenWRT (which would give you complete SSH also) or by buying a supported router from a reputable manufacturer and keeping it up to date.



I have myself used OpenWRT on a similar device by D-Link. Installing it will probably also be easier than you expect and you will have SSH access and full control also. In OpenWRT, there are serious advances in how your internet connection gets used more efficiently and also regular security fixes (which you should apply). You might also learn something helpful on the way, like not using telnet in 2018.



Btw. you will do yourself a favor, if you upgrade to something newer with Gigabit Ethernet Ports, and more RAM (like at least 128 MB). You can have a look, whether OpenWRT folks recommend it beforehand, since those are actually the serious users. The Linksys WRT AC1200 seems to be well supported.






share|improve this answer























  • While you make several good points, your answer has very little to do with what was asked. Telnet is a feature that needs to die due to it's serious security risks and implications, however @Mmh asked how to enable it, which you didn't even attempt to address. Might I suggest editing your answer to address that, as well as removing the 1st & 3rd paragraphs? Without an edit, you're likely going to see more down votes. If you edit your answer, I'll remove my down vote.
    – JW0914
    Aug 6 '18 at 3:54












  • Thank You for Your time and thought. Please read the question again "I want to access D-Link DIR-600L wireless router via terminal. Can i do this by opening telnet port. [Grammatically, here should be a question mark.]" -> My answer to what the user wants to do is don't, you will hurt yourself and possibly others. Then I offer an overall better solution - SSH and possibly OpenWRT, which also puts you in control of your device. This is what I think the user actually wants.
    – AdamKalisz
    Aug 6 '18 at 17:18






  • 1




    Thank you for considering re-wording your answer, my down vote has been removed.
    – JW0914
    Aug 7 '18 at 13:45











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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0















  1. Login to the web interface.

  2. You can access shell terminal using: 192.168.0.1/shell.asp where 192.168.0.1 is your IP address of Wi-Fi router.

  3. In the shell terminal you type: telnetd.sh and press Apply.

  4. Using telnet client in your PC and type telnet 192.168.0.1 and you can see login prompt.


But I can’t find any information to login by root. Router say login incorrect when I type root in login prompt.






share|improve this answer























  • This is decent info, but the last part of your answer reads like a new question. It might be best if you post a new question referencing this question that asks what login credentials you should be using.
    – JakeGould
    Jan 11 '16 at 4:14










  • thank, but i think if someone know answer when search this question, i can get the solution in fastest way.
    – quannt
    Jan 25 '16 at 2:36










  • Try admin, else, since it's likely the information would be covered somewhere by an OpenWrt or DD-WRT user, I'd recommend doing some research on OpenWrt and DD-WRT's sites, wikis, or forums if either supports the device, as well as through google.
    – JW0914
    Aug 6 '18 at 4:27


















0















  1. Login to the web interface.

  2. You can access shell terminal using: 192.168.0.1/shell.asp where 192.168.0.1 is your IP address of Wi-Fi router.

  3. In the shell terminal you type: telnetd.sh and press Apply.

  4. Using telnet client in your PC and type telnet 192.168.0.1 and you can see login prompt.


But I can’t find any information to login by root. Router say login incorrect when I type root in login prompt.






share|improve this answer























  • This is decent info, but the last part of your answer reads like a new question. It might be best if you post a new question referencing this question that asks what login credentials you should be using.
    – JakeGould
    Jan 11 '16 at 4:14










  • thank, but i think if someone know answer when search this question, i can get the solution in fastest way.
    – quannt
    Jan 25 '16 at 2:36










  • Try admin, else, since it's likely the information would be covered somewhere by an OpenWrt or DD-WRT user, I'd recommend doing some research on OpenWrt and DD-WRT's sites, wikis, or forums if either supports the device, as well as through google.
    – JW0914
    Aug 6 '18 at 4:27
















0












0








0







  1. Login to the web interface.

  2. You can access shell terminal using: 192.168.0.1/shell.asp where 192.168.0.1 is your IP address of Wi-Fi router.

  3. In the shell terminal you type: telnetd.sh and press Apply.

  4. Using telnet client in your PC and type telnet 192.168.0.1 and you can see login prompt.


But I can’t find any information to login by root. Router say login incorrect when I type root in login prompt.






share|improve this answer















  1. Login to the web interface.

  2. You can access shell terminal using: 192.168.0.1/shell.asp where 192.168.0.1 is your IP address of Wi-Fi router.

  3. In the shell terminal you type: telnetd.sh and press Apply.

  4. Using telnet client in your PC and type telnet 192.168.0.1 and you can see login prompt.


But I can’t find any information to login by root. Router say login incorrect when I type root in login prompt.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 11 '16 at 4:13









JakeGould

31k1093137




31k1093137










answered Jan 11 '16 at 2:41









quannt

11




11












  • This is decent info, but the last part of your answer reads like a new question. It might be best if you post a new question referencing this question that asks what login credentials you should be using.
    – JakeGould
    Jan 11 '16 at 4:14










  • thank, but i think if someone know answer when search this question, i can get the solution in fastest way.
    – quannt
    Jan 25 '16 at 2:36










  • Try admin, else, since it's likely the information would be covered somewhere by an OpenWrt or DD-WRT user, I'd recommend doing some research on OpenWrt and DD-WRT's sites, wikis, or forums if either supports the device, as well as through google.
    – JW0914
    Aug 6 '18 at 4:27




















  • This is decent info, but the last part of your answer reads like a new question. It might be best if you post a new question referencing this question that asks what login credentials you should be using.
    – JakeGould
    Jan 11 '16 at 4:14










  • thank, but i think if someone know answer when search this question, i can get the solution in fastest way.
    – quannt
    Jan 25 '16 at 2:36










  • Try admin, else, since it's likely the information would be covered somewhere by an OpenWrt or DD-WRT user, I'd recommend doing some research on OpenWrt and DD-WRT's sites, wikis, or forums if either supports the device, as well as through google.
    – JW0914
    Aug 6 '18 at 4:27


















This is decent info, but the last part of your answer reads like a new question. It might be best if you post a new question referencing this question that asks what login credentials you should be using.
– JakeGould
Jan 11 '16 at 4:14




This is decent info, but the last part of your answer reads like a new question. It might be best if you post a new question referencing this question that asks what login credentials you should be using.
– JakeGould
Jan 11 '16 at 4:14












thank, but i think if someone know answer when search this question, i can get the solution in fastest way.
– quannt
Jan 25 '16 at 2:36




thank, but i think if someone know answer when search this question, i can get the solution in fastest way.
– quannt
Jan 25 '16 at 2:36












Try admin, else, since it's likely the information would be covered somewhere by an OpenWrt or DD-WRT user, I'd recommend doing some research on OpenWrt and DD-WRT's sites, wikis, or forums if either supports the device, as well as through google.
– JW0914
Aug 6 '18 at 4:27






Try admin, else, since it's likely the information would be covered somewhere by an OpenWrt or DD-WRT user, I'd recommend doing some research on OpenWrt and DD-WRT's sites, wikis, or forums if either supports the device, as well as through google.
– JW0914
Aug 6 '18 at 4:27















0














First of all, don't use telnet - just don't if you can avoid it. Buy a copy of Michael W. Lucas "SSH Mastery 2nd Edition" (which is actually quite approachable) and read it. Telnet is not encrypted (and also has way less functionality than OpenSSH)!



If you want to use telnet anyway:




  1. Login to the web interface with Your credentials.

  2. If you use Windows, open cmd.exe from start. (Windows+R type cmd and press Enter)

  3. Write telnet <YOUR ROUTERS IP HERE> e.g. like telnet 192.168.0.100

  4. Login as admin and write Your password.


Your D-Link DIR-600L Router has most likely many security vulnerabilities. Please do the internet community a favor and upgrade to a supported operating system like OpenWRT (which would give you complete SSH also) or by buying a supported router from a reputable manufacturer and keeping it up to date.



I have myself used OpenWRT on a similar device by D-Link. Installing it will probably also be easier than you expect and you will have SSH access and full control also. In OpenWRT, there are serious advances in how your internet connection gets used more efficiently and also regular security fixes (which you should apply). You might also learn something helpful on the way, like not using telnet in 2018.



Btw. you will do yourself a favor, if you upgrade to something newer with Gigabit Ethernet Ports, and more RAM (like at least 128 MB). You can have a look, whether OpenWRT folks recommend it beforehand, since those are actually the serious users. The Linksys WRT AC1200 seems to be well supported.






share|improve this answer























  • While you make several good points, your answer has very little to do with what was asked. Telnet is a feature that needs to die due to it's serious security risks and implications, however @Mmh asked how to enable it, which you didn't even attempt to address. Might I suggest editing your answer to address that, as well as removing the 1st & 3rd paragraphs? Without an edit, you're likely going to see more down votes. If you edit your answer, I'll remove my down vote.
    – JW0914
    Aug 6 '18 at 3:54












  • Thank You for Your time and thought. Please read the question again "I want to access D-Link DIR-600L wireless router via terminal. Can i do this by opening telnet port. [Grammatically, here should be a question mark.]" -> My answer to what the user wants to do is don't, you will hurt yourself and possibly others. Then I offer an overall better solution - SSH and possibly OpenWRT, which also puts you in control of your device. This is what I think the user actually wants.
    – AdamKalisz
    Aug 6 '18 at 17:18






  • 1




    Thank you for considering re-wording your answer, my down vote has been removed.
    – JW0914
    Aug 7 '18 at 13:45
















0














First of all, don't use telnet - just don't if you can avoid it. Buy a copy of Michael W. Lucas "SSH Mastery 2nd Edition" (which is actually quite approachable) and read it. Telnet is not encrypted (and also has way less functionality than OpenSSH)!



If you want to use telnet anyway:




  1. Login to the web interface with Your credentials.

  2. If you use Windows, open cmd.exe from start. (Windows+R type cmd and press Enter)

  3. Write telnet <YOUR ROUTERS IP HERE> e.g. like telnet 192.168.0.100

  4. Login as admin and write Your password.


Your D-Link DIR-600L Router has most likely many security vulnerabilities. Please do the internet community a favor and upgrade to a supported operating system like OpenWRT (which would give you complete SSH also) or by buying a supported router from a reputable manufacturer and keeping it up to date.



I have myself used OpenWRT on a similar device by D-Link. Installing it will probably also be easier than you expect and you will have SSH access and full control also. In OpenWRT, there are serious advances in how your internet connection gets used more efficiently and also regular security fixes (which you should apply). You might also learn something helpful on the way, like not using telnet in 2018.



Btw. you will do yourself a favor, if you upgrade to something newer with Gigabit Ethernet Ports, and more RAM (like at least 128 MB). You can have a look, whether OpenWRT folks recommend it beforehand, since those are actually the serious users. The Linksys WRT AC1200 seems to be well supported.






share|improve this answer























  • While you make several good points, your answer has very little to do with what was asked. Telnet is a feature that needs to die due to it's serious security risks and implications, however @Mmh asked how to enable it, which you didn't even attempt to address. Might I suggest editing your answer to address that, as well as removing the 1st & 3rd paragraphs? Without an edit, you're likely going to see more down votes. If you edit your answer, I'll remove my down vote.
    – JW0914
    Aug 6 '18 at 3:54












  • Thank You for Your time and thought. Please read the question again "I want to access D-Link DIR-600L wireless router via terminal. Can i do this by opening telnet port. [Grammatically, here should be a question mark.]" -> My answer to what the user wants to do is don't, you will hurt yourself and possibly others. Then I offer an overall better solution - SSH and possibly OpenWRT, which also puts you in control of your device. This is what I think the user actually wants.
    – AdamKalisz
    Aug 6 '18 at 17:18






  • 1




    Thank you for considering re-wording your answer, my down vote has been removed.
    – JW0914
    Aug 7 '18 at 13:45














0












0








0






First of all, don't use telnet - just don't if you can avoid it. Buy a copy of Michael W. Lucas "SSH Mastery 2nd Edition" (which is actually quite approachable) and read it. Telnet is not encrypted (and also has way less functionality than OpenSSH)!



If you want to use telnet anyway:




  1. Login to the web interface with Your credentials.

  2. If you use Windows, open cmd.exe from start. (Windows+R type cmd and press Enter)

  3. Write telnet <YOUR ROUTERS IP HERE> e.g. like telnet 192.168.0.100

  4. Login as admin and write Your password.


Your D-Link DIR-600L Router has most likely many security vulnerabilities. Please do the internet community a favor and upgrade to a supported operating system like OpenWRT (which would give you complete SSH also) or by buying a supported router from a reputable manufacturer and keeping it up to date.



I have myself used OpenWRT on a similar device by D-Link. Installing it will probably also be easier than you expect and you will have SSH access and full control also. In OpenWRT, there are serious advances in how your internet connection gets used more efficiently and also regular security fixes (which you should apply). You might also learn something helpful on the way, like not using telnet in 2018.



Btw. you will do yourself a favor, if you upgrade to something newer with Gigabit Ethernet Ports, and more RAM (like at least 128 MB). You can have a look, whether OpenWRT folks recommend it beforehand, since those are actually the serious users. The Linksys WRT AC1200 seems to be well supported.






share|improve this answer














First of all, don't use telnet - just don't if you can avoid it. Buy a copy of Michael W. Lucas "SSH Mastery 2nd Edition" (which is actually quite approachable) and read it. Telnet is not encrypted (and also has way less functionality than OpenSSH)!



If you want to use telnet anyway:




  1. Login to the web interface with Your credentials.

  2. If you use Windows, open cmd.exe from start. (Windows+R type cmd and press Enter)

  3. Write telnet <YOUR ROUTERS IP HERE> e.g. like telnet 192.168.0.100

  4. Login as admin and write Your password.


Your D-Link DIR-600L Router has most likely many security vulnerabilities. Please do the internet community a favor and upgrade to a supported operating system like OpenWRT (which would give you complete SSH also) or by buying a supported router from a reputable manufacturer and keeping it up to date.



I have myself used OpenWRT on a similar device by D-Link. Installing it will probably also be easier than you expect and you will have SSH access and full control also. In OpenWRT, there are serious advances in how your internet connection gets used more efficiently and also regular security fixes (which you should apply). You might also learn something helpful on the way, like not using telnet in 2018.



Btw. you will do yourself a favor, if you upgrade to something newer with Gigabit Ethernet Ports, and more RAM (like at least 128 MB). You can have a look, whether OpenWRT folks recommend it beforehand, since those are actually the serious users. The Linksys WRT AC1200 seems to be well supported.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Aug 6 '18 at 17:50

























answered Aug 5 '18 at 22:21









AdamKalisz

40946




40946












  • While you make several good points, your answer has very little to do with what was asked. Telnet is a feature that needs to die due to it's serious security risks and implications, however @Mmh asked how to enable it, which you didn't even attempt to address. Might I suggest editing your answer to address that, as well as removing the 1st & 3rd paragraphs? Without an edit, you're likely going to see more down votes. If you edit your answer, I'll remove my down vote.
    – JW0914
    Aug 6 '18 at 3:54












  • Thank You for Your time and thought. Please read the question again "I want to access D-Link DIR-600L wireless router via terminal. Can i do this by opening telnet port. [Grammatically, here should be a question mark.]" -> My answer to what the user wants to do is don't, you will hurt yourself and possibly others. Then I offer an overall better solution - SSH and possibly OpenWRT, which also puts you in control of your device. This is what I think the user actually wants.
    – AdamKalisz
    Aug 6 '18 at 17:18






  • 1




    Thank you for considering re-wording your answer, my down vote has been removed.
    – JW0914
    Aug 7 '18 at 13:45


















  • While you make several good points, your answer has very little to do with what was asked. Telnet is a feature that needs to die due to it's serious security risks and implications, however @Mmh asked how to enable it, which you didn't even attempt to address. Might I suggest editing your answer to address that, as well as removing the 1st & 3rd paragraphs? Without an edit, you're likely going to see more down votes. If you edit your answer, I'll remove my down vote.
    – JW0914
    Aug 6 '18 at 3:54












  • Thank You for Your time and thought. Please read the question again "I want to access D-Link DIR-600L wireless router via terminal. Can i do this by opening telnet port. [Grammatically, here should be a question mark.]" -> My answer to what the user wants to do is don't, you will hurt yourself and possibly others. Then I offer an overall better solution - SSH and possibly OpenWRT, which also puts you in control of your device. This is what I think the user actually wants.
    – AdamKalisz
    Aug 6 '18 at 17:18






  • 1




    Thank you for considering re-wording your answer, my down vote has been removed.
    – JW0914
    Aug 7 '18 at 13:45
















While you make several good points, your answer has very little to do with what was asked. Telnet is a feature that needs to die due to it's serious security risks and implications, however @Mmh asked how to enable it, which you didn't even attempt to address. Might I suggest editing your answer to address that, as well as removing the 1st & 3rd paragraphs? Without an edit, you're likely going to see more down votes. If you edit your answer, I'll remove my down vote.
– JW0914
Aug 6 '18 at 3:54






While you make several good points, your answer has very little to do with what was asked. Telnet is a feature that needs to die due to it's serious security risks and implications, however @Mmh asked how to enable it, which you didn't even attempt to address. Might I suggest editing your answer to address that, as well as removing the 1st & 3rd paragraphs? Without an edit, you're likely going to see more down votes. If you edit your answer, I'll remove my down vote.
– JW0914
Aug 6 '18 at 3:54














Thank You for Your time and thought. Please read the question again "I want to access D-Link DIR-600L wireless router via terminal. Can i do this by opening telnet port. [Grammatically, here should be a question mark.]" -> My answer to what the user wants to do is don't, you will hurt yourself and possibly others. Then I offer an overall better solution - SSH and possibly OpenWRT, which also puts you in control of your device. This is what I think the user actually wants.
– AdamKalisz
Aug 6 '18 at 17:18




Thank You for Your time and thought. Please read the question again "I want to access D-Link DIR-600L wireless router via terminal. Can i do this by opening telnet port. [Grammatically, here should be a question mark.]" -> My answer to what the user wants to do is don't, you will hurt yourself and possibly others. Then I offer an overall better solution - SSH and possibly OpenWRT, which also puts you in control of your device. This is what I think the user actually wants.
– AdamKalisz
Aug 6 '18 at 17:18




1




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Thank you for considering re-wording your answer, my down vote has been removed.
– JW0914
Aug 7 '18 at 13:45




Thank you for considering re-wording your answer, my down vote has been removed.
– JW0914
Aug 7 '18 at 13:45


















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