James,

-o "PubkeyAuthentication no" -o "UserKnownHostsFile /dev/null"  -o
"StrictHostKeyChecking no"

Regards,

-Urivan Flores

==============Original message text===============
On Sat, 16 Aug 2008 16:38:34 PDT "James G. Sack (jim)" wrote:

I thought StrictHostKeyChecking=no would help but it really doesn't.

Here's one scenario:

ssh to a remote, which is a multi-boot machine (each having different
automatically created hostkey).

Each time I connect to a different one of them, it warns either:
 permanently adding ... to list of known hosts
or
 REMOTE HOST IDENTIFICATION HAS CHANGED! ...

And that's with strict checking set to no.
With "yes", I recall that it asks on initial connect, refuses connect
when changed.

Aha (I thought), how about
  -oCheckHostIp=no
but that didn't seem to disable hostkey checking (as I expected) -- so
no change. This setting must be for something else (or broke)?

Is there some way to totally ignore hostkey for certain hosts?


-- 
[email protected]
http://www.kernel-panic.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/kplug-list
===========End of original message text===========



Urivan A. Flores Saaib
CiberLinux Networking
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



-- 
[email protected]
http://www.kernel-panic.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/kplug-list

Reply via email to