Am 27.12.2019 um 00:03 schrieb Evan Cooch:
On 12/26/2019 4:48 PM, Marco Atzeri wrote:
Am 26.12.2019 um 22:13 schrieb Evan Cooch:
Thanks, but insufficient. Where is the Cygwin sshd equivalent of the
following for the Windows 10 implementation of OpenSSH?:
https://www.pugetsystems.com/labs/hpc/How-To-Use-SSH-Client-and-Server-on-Windows-10-1470/
Is there an equivalent for Cygwin sshd, that deals in a step-by-step
fashion specifically with handling recent build of Windows 10, all of
which have openSSH pre-installed?
Evan,
Bottom post on this mailing list, please.
Sure -- will do moving forward.
$ cygcheck -p bin/sshd
Found 4 matches for bin/sshd
openssh-debuginfo-8.0p1-2 - openssh-debuginfo: Debug info for openssh
openssh-debuginfo-8.1p1-1 - openssh-debuginfo: Debug info for openssh
openssh-8.0p1-2 - openssh: The OpenSSH server and client programs
openssh-8.1p1-1 - openssh: The OpenSSH server and client programs
so openssh is the package providing the ssh demon/server
Presumably on a machine running the cygwin sshd, correct?
no. Option -p asks the cygwin website and the reply provides
all packages and versions. For this reason I asked for bin/sshd
to trim the answer only to binary programs
$ cygcheck -l openssh | grep config
/etc/defaults/etc/sshd_config
/etc/defaults/etc/ssh_config
/usr/bin/ssh-host-config
/usr/bin/ssh-user-config
/usr/share/man/man5/sshd_config.5.gz
/usr/share/man/man5/ssh_config.5.gz
Option -l is for the current installation
ssh-host-config is used to install and configure the Cygwin server
ssh-user-config is used to install user specific files.
Its use is very simple, step by step approuch as mentioned on
/usr/share/doc/Cygwin/openssh.README
As you can not have two different sshd demons running
at the same time, use "net start <service>" and
"net stop <service>" that are your usual windows command friends.
OK -- but my question wasn't so much about using openSSH, but rather,
how to do an install of Cygwin ssh on a Win 10 machine, which already
has a native ssh server client 'bult in'. A number of us have tried
using the standard approaches for installing cygwin and having sshd run
as a service (approaches that worked fine on Win 7, and pre-1803 builds
of WIn 10), but have had problems with Windows complaining (or, if not
complaining, not allowing a different sshd). It seems as if you need to
'turn off' or 'uninstall' something with recent Win 10 builds to get
Cygwin sshd to install -- and work -- as a service. That is the step
some of us are hoping someone can step us through.
for what I remenber the collision in installing was caused
by MS calling the service sshd just as Cygwin one.
Now the service is installed as cygsshd so there should be no
collision in installation.
See on
https://www.cygwin.com/ml/cygwin-announce/2019-04/msg00017.html
"* sshd(8) Cygwin: Change service name to cygsshd to avoid collision
with Microsoft's OpenSSH port."
Of course you can not have the two runnning together
so you neeed to stop or disable the MS one.
For that you can use
C:\Windows\System32\services.msc
or the MS "net" command
Regards
Marco
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