Geoffrey --

...and then Gann, Geoffrey P. said...
% 
% Hello.

Hi!


% 
% On my 7.2 redhat systems, I am seeing something odd in that when I send an
% ls command to another
% machine, ie.

Indeed.


% rsh anothermachine ls
% the output is that for the root userid, instead of my 'regular',
% non-privileged id.

How do you mean?


% If I explicitly specify ~ in the ls command, ie
% rsh anothermachine "ls ~"
% I get the expected results listing contents of my home directory.

OK.


% 
% Not sure what I've done wrong but if someone could provide a clue or 2, I'd
% appreciate it.

Well, some more detail would help greatly.  For starters, what do you get
when you try

  rsh anothermachine "uname -a ; id ; pwd"

in the same manner?


% 
% Thanks,
% 
% Geoff
% 
% 
% Geoff Gann
% WorkStation Systems Support
% Computer Sciences Corporation
% Pratt & Whitney, Florida


HTH & HAND

:-D
-- 
David T-G                      * There is too much animal courage in 
(play) [EMAIL PROTECTED] * society and not sufficient moral courage.
(work) [EMAIL PROTECTED]  -- Mary Baker Eddy, "Science and Health"
http://justpickone.org/davidtg/      Shpx gur Pbzzhavpngvbaf Qrprapl Npg!

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