Re: How does one discover a ghost path to non-exitent server
Andrey Repin writes: > Greetings, Harry Putnam! > >> I'm sure there has been plenty of pounding over time about not being >> able to get a sshd server working on win 10 > > That was years ago, when M$ had introduced SSH server of their own into > Windows10 Pro+ editions. There is nothing in this post regarding windows own introduction of using openssh for a server. So, I'm not sure what your comment means there. >> Running latest cygwin on win 10 I go thru the steps that begin with >> ssh-host-config -y > >> I'm told at the end the server wasn't installed because there already >> is one. > >> Neither "cygrunsrv -S" nor "net start" know anything about it. > >>> $ sc query | grep -i ssh > > ? > >> In an old post from this groups I found mention of there being a problem >> where previous attempts to install sshd server may have left the path >> but not the server. > >> Not really sure what the heck that might mean. Something like a cygwin >> install of ssh and sshd server scouts around somewhere and finds a >> path but no server and says OK, good to go. You have the server. > > It may have left a record in the system's services list, but no actual binary > was left on the disk. > Or it was an old Cygwin versions that stumbled upon modern Windows and tripped > over standard SSH service name. > >> It sounds kind of silly on the surface but I guess it is, in fact, a >> real problem. > >> Cutting to the chase, can anyone tell me what can be done about such a >> problem? How can one find and erase a path that has no sshd at the >> end. > >> Maybe I'm just misunderstanding things a bit. > > 1. Make sure you are using updated 64-bit Cygwin install. > 2. Check if there's no Cygwin sshd services installed (name is cygsshd). > 3. Try again with `ssh-host-config`. > 4. Provide logs of the command and `cygcheck -svr` if it fails again. > (gzip the cygcheck output, the list often rejects emails that are too big) Thank you sir for the excellent input. I left the bulk of the post in tact in case other seachers may stumble into it. I'm pretty sure your help would have saved the day but as it happens. I haven't really done a thing toward fixing it, yet when I looked at the list of windows services again I spotted the service right away, its on and working. I think just on the strength of your help and participation the heebjeebs who were meddling with things cleared out. Thanks -- Problem reports: https://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: https://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation:https://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: https://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple
Re: How does one discover a ghost path to non-exitent server
Greetings, Harry Putnam! > I'm sure there has been plenty of pounding over time about not being > able to get a sshd server working on win 10 That was years ago, when M$ had introduced SSH server of their own into Windows10 Pro+ editions. > Running latest cygwin on win 10 I go thru the steps that begin with > ssh-host-config -y > I'm told at the end the server wasn't installed because there already > is one. > Neither "cygrunsrv -S" nor "net start" know anything about it. >> $ sc query | grep -i ssh ? > In an old post from this groups I found mention of there being a problem > where previous attempts to install sshd server may have left the path > but not the server. > Not really sure what the heck that might mean. Something like a cygwin > install of ssh and sshd server scouts around somewhere and finds a > path but no server and says OK, good to go. You have the server. It may have left a record in the system's services list, but no actual binary was left on the disk. Or it was an old Cygwin versions that stumbled upon modern Windows and tripped over standard SSH service name. > It sounds kind of silly on the surface but I guess it is, in fact, a > real problem. > Cutting to the chase, can anyone tell me what can be done about such a > problem? How can one find and erase a path that has no sshd at the > end. > Maybe I'm just misunderstanding things a bit. 1. Make sure you are using updated 64-bit Cygwin install. 2. Check if there's no Cygwin sshd services installed (name is cygsshd). 3. Try again with `ssh-host-config`. 4. Provide logs of the command and `cygcheck -svr` if it fails again. (gzip the cygcheck output, the list often rejects emails that are too big) -- With best regards, Andrey Repin Monday, November 28, 2022 11:58:02 Sorry for my terrible english... -- Problem reports: https://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: https://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation:https://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: https://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple
How does one discover a ghost path to non-exitent server
I'm sorry my first post here is probably something that was thrashed out here long ago. I'm not finding the answers on goggle, even the hits that were from this newsgroup. I'm sure there has been plenty of pounding over time about not being able to get a sshd server working on win 10 Running latest cygwin on win 10 I go thru the steps that begin with ssh-host-config -y I'm told at the end the server wasn't installed because there already is one. Neither "cygrunsrv -S" nor "net start" know anything about it. In an old post from this groups I found mention of there being a problem where previous attempts to install sshd server may have left the path but not the server. Not really sure what the heck that might mean. Something like a cygwin install of ssh and sshd server scouts around somewhere and finds a path but no server and says OK, good to go. You have the server. It sounds kind of silly on the surface but I guess it is, in fact, a real problem. Cutting to the chase, can anyone tell me what can be done about such a problem? How can one find and erase a path that has no sshd at the end. Maybe I'm just misunderstanding things a bit. -- Problem reports: https://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: https://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation:https://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: https://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple