Glen Mazza wrote:
Thanks, Peter, that helped a lot--I downloaded
puttygen and am working with it now. Three more
questions if anyone can help:
1) I guess we're to use SSH2 and not SSH1, but does it
matter whether we use DSA or RSA? Is one much slower
than the other? I'll use DSA--it apparently
Yes, this works. Thank you!
(wish you a happy new year by the way ;-)
Happy new year to you all.
Peter Herweg
-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Auftrag
von Bertrand Delacretaz
Gesendet: Thursday, January 01, 2004 3:52 PM
An: [EMAIL
Which tool did you finally use to create the SSH key,
and where do you run it?
...
Thanks,
Glen
I used the key i have already used for accessing jfor's cvs repository at
sourceforge. I created the key about 6 month ago with puttygen. I ran it on
my local computer (win2000 prof.).
But you
Thanks, Peter, that helped a lot--I downloaded
puttygen and am working with it now. Three more
questions if anyone can help:
1) I guess we're to use SSH2 and not SSH1, but does it
matter whether we use DSA or RSA? Is one much slower
than the other? I'll use DSA--it apparently works for
you and
Glen Mazza wrote:
1) I guess we're to use SSH2 and not SSH1,
SSH1 and SSH2 are versions of the protocol, in particular
the initial handshake. The SSH1 had a vulnerability. Which
protocol is used is determined in the initial handshake,
for compatibility. A prodent server administrator disables
SSH1
Thanks for your help.
Glen
--- J.Pietschmann [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Glen Mazza wrote:
1) I guess we're to use SSH2 and not SSH1,
SSH1 and SSH2 are versions of the protocol, in
particular
the initial handshake. The SSH1 had a vulnerability.
Which
protocol is used is determined in the