Thanks I'll have a look.
On different note, are there any of the MDK kernels ie secure, smp etc
that dont have the NAT module built as I'm seeing a very strange prob]
on that friends PC.
TNX
Richard
On Fri, 2003-09-26 at 21:05, Vincent Danen wrote:
> On Fri Sep 26, 2003 at 08:44:59PM +0100, Rich
Hi All , is the an idiot guide to setting up ssh anywhere.?
TIA
--
Richard Bown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
On Friday 26 September 2003 12:44 pm, Richard Bown wrote:
> Hi All , is the an idiot guide to setting up ssh anywhere.?
>
Try:
http://www.aerospacesoftware.com/ssh-howto.html
> TIA
Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
On Fri Sep 26, 2003 at 08:44:59PM +0100, Richard Bown wrote:
> Hi All , is the an idiot guide to setting up ssh anywhere.?
Not really an idiot guide, but might be of interest:
http://linsec.ca/bin/view/Main/OpenSSH
the same article is on MandrakeSecure someplace, but the above is the one
that I
Hi! I sent this message b4 to newbie list, but I got absolute no
answer.I hope someone can help me here...Thus, I tried to run
telnetd from xinetd, no success, tried to configure thelistening ports to
the standard ports, and got no success.Shorewall is not installed, iptables
is empty, netst
On Tuesday 12 August 2003 10:56 pm, Greg Meyer wrote:
> On Tuesday 12 August 2003 10:11 pm, João Candido A. Milasch Filho wrote:
> > Hi! I sent this message b4 to newbie list, but I got absolute no answer.
> > I hope someone can help me here...
> > Anyone knows what can I do to figure out whats ha
Wow. Sounds like you're dealing with some mighty unreasonable people here...
Frankly, the first thing that I'd do is look for a new ISP! (And maybe a new
employer, while I was at it.)
Assuming those aren't options:
0) Did you try port 443? That's HTTPS, which many admins seem to forget
abo
On Tuesday 12 August 2003 10:11 pm, João Candido A. Milasch Filho wrote:
> Hi! I sent this message b4 to newbie list, but I got absolute no answer.
> I hope someone can help me here...
>
> Thus, I tried to run telnetd from xinetd, no success, tried to configure
> the listening ports to the standard
Well. I got an answer to my problem. About a year ago, my adsl provider
blocked about all reserved ports, and thats why I can't use'em. Although
I told you before that they were unblocked by the ISP. Then, I fall on
another problem: The work's firewall! So, I'll need to get a list of
unblocked
You don't have an _external_ hardware firewall (like a cable/dsl router), do
you? Those will block all incomming traffic by default... (Probably a dumb
question.)
Failing that, are you using xinetd for sshd as well? On my system, I simply
disable it and run it as a daemon. It should be poss
look at /etc/hosts.allow and /etc/hosts.deny.
Jack
On Tue, 2003-08-12 at 19:11, João Candido A. Milasch Filho wrote:
> Hi! I sent this message b4 to newbie list, but I got absolute no
> answer.
> I hope someone can help me here...
>
> Thus, I tried to run telnetd from xinetd, no success, tried t
Hello,
Does someone know of a working scp/sftp frontend on mandrake 9.0 ?
I found the konqueror support is working for "get" but broken for "put"
(that is reported under kde.bugs.org).
Also, gftp wich supports ssh2 does not work, since it relies on the
sftp-server binary on the remote machine wh
Hi.
On Fri 2003-01-31 at 23:57:16 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Sat Feb 01, 2003 at 12:17:05AM -0500, Scott Crumpler wrote:
>
> > I'm noticing some wierd behavior on the behalf of my OpenSSH daemon... When
> > it starts listening, there is only one instance of the process in memory.
On Sat Feb 01, 2003 at 12:17:05AM -0500, Scott Crumpler wrote:
> I'm noticing some wierd behavior on the behalf of my OpenSSH daemon... When
> it starts listening, there is only one instance of the process in memory.
> But after I connect to it, there are 3 instances. Now I can understan
I'm noticing some wierd behavior on the behalf of my OpenSSH daemon... When
it starts listening, there is only one instance of the process in memory.
But after I connect to it, there are 3 instances. Now I can understand 2
instances (one to handle the connection and another one that f
Does anyone know how to get ssh to authenticate from ldap?
I've tried editing /etc/pam.d/sshd but I haven't had any luck.
Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
Were still talking about the initial install aren't we?
I was talking about runtime boot up.
Afaik /etc/modules.conf's content hasn't been written yet i.e. is about to be
written.
--
Ron. [Melbourne, Australia]
20030106 updates now available for Fastest Mandrake downlo
On Wednesday 15 January 2003 04:31, Ron Stodden wrote:
> H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
> > On Tuesday 14 January 2003 13:12, Ron Stodden wrote:
> >>It is kernel that assigns eth numbers at boot time, I suspect based on
> >>the (remembered) MAC at the other end of the link, using arp (see man
> >>arp), and th
H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
On Tuesday 14 January 2003 13:12, Ron Stodden wrote:
It is kernel that assigns eth numbers at boot time, I suspect based on
the (remembered) MAC at the other end of the link, using arp (see man
arp), and the eth number assigned by kernel has nothing to do with the
NIC type,
On Tuesday 14 January 2003 13:12, Ron Stodden wrote:
> H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
> > Take care to know which Nic is going to be eth0 or eth1 i.e. which Nic is
> > which.
> > Smoothwall recognizes them alphabetically on vendor.
>
> What makes you think that?
>
> It is kernel that assigns eth numbers at bo
H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
Take care to know which Nic is going to be eth0 or eth1 i.e. which Nic is
which.
Smoothwall recognizes them alphabetically on vendor.
What makes you think that?
It is kernel that assigns eth numbers at boot time, I suspect based on
the (remembered) MAC at the other end of
On Monday 13 January 2003 19:56, James Sparenberg wrote:
> Harm,
>
>Thanks on one thing... I never noticed before but you are right a
> number of "firewalls" do recognize the cards alphabetically instead of
> asking... Wondered about this before myself... SNF does it by going
> numbers first...
Harm,
Thanks on one thing... I never noticed before but you are right a
number of "firewalls" do recognize the cards alphabetically instead of
asking... Wondered about this before myself... SNF does it by going
numbers first... Which is why 3com comes before Linksys*sigh* Like
it better whe
On Monday 13 January 2003 17:36, Mark Weaver wrote:
> >>
> >>I'm getting jazzed about this. As soon as the new Nic's I ordered get
> >>here I'll be setting this up on a box here at the house. I tested the
> >>boot disk last night after it was made and it works good. even managed
> >>to remember ho
H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
On Monday 13 January 2003 13:51, Mark Weaver wrote:
H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
On Monday 13 January 2003 02:20, Ken Thompson wrote:
On Friday 10 January 2003 08:30 am, Mark Weaver wrote:
Ken Thompson wrote:
On Thursday 09 January 2003 08:14 pm, Mark Weaver wrote:
Pierre Fo
On Monday 13 January 2003 13:51, Mark Weaver wrote:
> H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
> > On Monday 13 January 2003 02:20, Ken Thompson wrote:
> >>On Friday 10 January 2003 08:30 am, Mark Weaver wrote:
> >>>Ken Thompson wrote:
> On Thursday 09 January 2003 08:14 pm, Mark Weaver wrote:
> >Pierre Fortin
H.J.Bathoorn wrote:
On Monday 13 January 2003 02:20, Ken Thompson wrote:
On Friday 10 January 2003 08:30 am, Mark Weaver wrote:
Ken Thompson wrote:
On Thursday 09 January 2003 08:14 pm, Mark Weaver wrote:
Pierre Fortin wrote:
Stop or remove "shorewall" -- sure wish Mdk would have made it
On Monday 13 January 2003 02:20, Ken Thompson wrote:
> On Friday 10 January 2003 08:30 am, Mark Weaver wrote:
> > Ken Thompson wrote:
> > > On Thursday 09 January 2003 08:14 pm, Mark Weaver wrote:
> > >>Pierre Fortin wrote:
> > >>>Stop or remove "shorewall" -- sure wish Mdk would have made it more
On Friday 10 January 2003 08:30 am, Mark Weaver wrote:
> Ken Thompson wrote:
> > On Thursday 09 January 2003 08:14 pm, Mark Weaver wrote:
> >>Pierre Fortin wrote:
> >>>Stop or remove "shorewall" -- sure wish Mdk would have made it more
> >>>obvious during install/upgrade that it was going to add a
I've setup a ssh server on mandrake 9.0 at work. Its
behind a D-Link DI-604 router/firewall on a DSL line.
I have the DI-604 forward port 22 to my ssh server.
>From my house I use Putty to ssh in to the network at
work and run VNC through ssh to my Windows 2000
computer at my desk at work. It wo
On Fri, Jan 10, 2003 at 10:30:04AM -0500, Mark Weaver wrote:
>
> >I grabbed an old P90 with 32MB - 540MB Drive and installed Smoothwall.
> >http://www.smoothwall.org
> >Now I run my entire network through it and just simply fergit it's there
> >except for frequent log checks.
>
> I've heard abou
Robert Goshko wrote:
On Fri, 2003-01-10 at 07:50, Ken Thompson wrote:
On Thursday 09 January 2003 08:14 pm, Mark Weaver wrote:
Pierre Fortin wrote:
Stop or remove "shorewall" -- sure wish Mdk would have made it more
obvious during install/upgrade that it was going to add a firewall
without a
On Friday 10 January 2003 03:54 am, Mark Watts wrote:
> > Geeze, when is Mandrake going to get a decent per-ethernet card GUI
> > firewall configurator with an advanced option that covers GUI
> > configuration for all the protocols for say port 1000 and below, an
> > Internet Connection Shareing on
On Friday 10 January 2003 02:50 pm, Ken Thompson wrote:
> On Thursday 09 January 2003 08:14 pm, Mark Weaver wrote:
> >
> > and I did take a look at gShield. The little bugger liked to drove me
> > nuts!
> >
> > Mark
>
> I grabbed an old P90 with 32MB - 540MB Drive and installed Smoothwall.
> http:/
On Fri, 2003-01-10 at 07:50, Ken Thompson wrote:
> On Thursday 09 January 2003 08:14 pm, Mark Weaver wrote:
> > Pierre Fortin wrote:
> > > Stop or remove "shorewall" -- sure wish Mdk would have made it more
> > > obvious during install/upgrade that it was going to add a firewall
> > > without
Ken Thompson wrote:
On Thursday 09 January 2003 08:14 pm, Mark Weaver wrote:
Pierre Fortin wrote:
Stop or remove "shorewall" -- sure wish Mdk would have made it more
obvious during install/upgrade that it was going to add a firewall
without asking...
:^Pierre
problem is...what does one use
On Thursday 09 January 2003 08:14 pm, Mark Weaver wrote:
> Pierre Fortin wrote:
> > Stop or remove "shorewall" -- sure wish Mdk would have made it more
> > obvious during install/upgrade that it was going to add a firewall
> > without asking...
> >
> > :^Pierre
>
> problem is...what does one use on
Pierre Fortin wrote:
On Thu, 09 Jan 2003 22:14:27 -0500 Mark Weaver
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Pierre Fortin wrote:
Stop or remove "shorewall" -- sure wish Mdk would have made it more
obvious during install/upgrade that it was going to add a firewall
without asking...
:^Pierre
problem is..
Rolf Pedersen wrote:
Mark Weaver wrote:
Pierre Fortin wrote:
Stop or remove "shorewall" -- sure wish Mdk would have made it more
obvious during install/upgrade that it was going to add a firewall
without
asking...
:^Pierre
problem is...what does one use on a Mandrake 9.0 box if not shorewa
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
> Geeze, when is Mandrake going to get a decent per-ethernet card GUI
> firewall configurator with an advanced option that covers GUI
> configuration for all the protocols for say port 1000 and below, an
> Internet Connection Shareing on/off button
Mark Weaver wrote:
Pierre Fortin wrote:
Stop or remove "shorewall" -- sure wish Mdk would have made it more
obvious during install/upgrade that it was going to add a firewall
without
asking...
:^Pierre
problem is...what does one use on a Mandrake 9.0 box if not shorewall
because I've had a t
On Thu, 09 Jan 2003 22:14:27 -0500 Mark Weaver
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Pierre Fortin wrote:
> > Stop or remove "shorewall" -- sure wish Mdk would have made it more
> > obvious during install/upgrade that it was going to add a firewall
> > without asking...
> >
> > :^Pierre
>
> problem is..
IL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [expert] SSH
Date: Thu, 09 Jan 2003 22:14:27 -0500
Pierre Fortin wrote:
Stop or remove "shorewall" -- sure wish Mdk would have made it more
obvious during install/upgrade that it was going to add a firewall w
Jim C wrote:
Experience tells me that when I stop shorewall from the command line
(i.e. "service shorewall stop" from the superuser bash prompt) my
network gets locked down. Ah dunno why. What I do to turn it off is go
into Control Center and select Security | Firewall and then unselect
ever
Pierre Fortin wrote:
Stop or remove "shorewall" -- sure wish Mdk would have made it more
obvious during install/upgrade that it was going to add a firewall without
asking...
:^Pierre
problem is...what does one use on a Mandrake 9.0 box if not shorewall
because I've had a terrible time in the p
FYI
service shorewall clear will clear the firewall
service shorewall stop stops it.
On Thursday 09 January 2003 09:35 pm, Jim C wrote:
> Experience tells me that when I stop shorewall from the command line
> (i.e. "service shorewall stop" from the superuser bash prompt) my
> network gets locked
Experience tells me that when I stop shorewall from the command line
(i.e. "service shorewall stop" from the superuser bash prompt) my
network gets locked down. Ah dunno why. What I do to turn it off is go
into Control Center and select Security | Firewall and then unselect
everything except
Stop or remove "shorewall" -- sure wish Mdk would have made it more
obvious during install/upgrade that it was going to add a firewall without
asking...
:^Pierre
On Thu, 9 Jan 2003 18:16:19 -0500 Brian York <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> I just installed mandrake 9 and I can't get ssh in to it
I just installed mandrake 9 and I can't get ssh in to it. Its running but I get
an error message connection closed by remote host. When I installed it I used 'higher'
security.
Thanks
Brian
On Monday, September 23, 2002, at 04:49 PM, K Montgomery wrote:
> I have a handy piece of script that I put in the .bash_profile of my
> Solaris account so that whenever I log in using SSH, my DISPLAY
> variable
> is automatically set to the IP I'm SSH-ing from:
>
> if [ "$SSH_CLIENT" != "" ];
I have a handy piece of script that I put in the .bash_profile of my
Solaris account so that whenever I log in using SSH, my DISPLAY variable
is automatically set to the IP I'm SSH-ing from:
if [ "$SSH_CLIENT" != "" ]; then
export DISPLAY=`echo $SSH_CLIENT | cut -d " " -f1`:0
fi
This cod
Greetings, I am running under Mandrake 8.2 with the default installed
ssh. I am trying
to ssh into a solaris box. It turns out that I can ssh into the solaris
machine ok, but when I
log in I notice that there is no DISPLAY env variable set and therefore
any x clients
will not work.
The sshd_co
Stefan Sten wrote on Sat, Aug 24, 2002 at 01:27:41AM +0200 :
> Hello,
>
> I?m connecting from my home to the university to do som work via
> Openssh v3.1 in MDk 8.2. I get the connection established, and can access
> my files as usual. The problem I get is when I want the display at my own
> mach
AFCA/TCAA wrote:
> Do you have reverse hostname entries in your dns server? Because this will cause
>this...
>
> -Original Message-
> From: David Rankin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Sunday, June 23, 2002 10:47 AM
> To: mandrake
> Subject: [expert] SSH and
Do you have reverse hostname entries in your dns server? Because this will cause
this...
-Original Message-
From: David Rankin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Sunday, June 23, 2002 10:47 AM
To: mandrake
Subject: [expert] SSH and FTP logins taking much LONGER
Listmates
Check your dns ...
BillK
On Sun, 2002-06-23 at 23:46, David Rankin wrote:
> Listmates:
>
> Over the past year, FTP and SSH logins are taking much longer. In the
> past FTP logins would take 2-3 seconds and SSH logins were almost
> instantaneous. Now both FTP and SSH logins take approximat
David Rankin wrote on Sun, Jun 23, 2002 at 10:46:43AM -0500 :
>
> Over the past year, FTP and SSH logins are taking much longer. In the
> past FTP logins would take 2-3 seconds and SSH logins were almost
> instantaneous. Now both FTP and SSH logins take approximately 20 - 30
> seconds. Upti
Am Son, 2002-06-23 um 17.46 schrieb David Rankin:
> Listmates:
>
> Over the past year, FTP and SSH logins are taking much longer. In the
> past FTP logins would take 2-3 seconds and SSH logins were almost
> instantaneous. Now both FTP and SSH logins take approximately 20 - 30
> seconds. Upt
Listmates:
Over the past year, FTP and SSH logins are taking much longer. In the
past FTP logins would take 2-3 seconds and SSH logins were almost
instantaneous. Now both FTP and SSH logins take approximately 20 - 30
seconds. Uptime is 363 days and I haven't restarted either xinetd, FTP
o
re you ssh'ing as root or as another user? Just as an idea, you may
> have better luck ssh'ing in as root and then trying.
>
> HTH
>
> David
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Brian Parish [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Sunday, May 19, 2002 7:13 AM
>
luck ssh'ing in as root and then trying.
HTH
David
-Original Message-
From: Brian Parish [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Sunday, May 19, 2002 7:13 AM
To: expert
Subject: Re: [expert] ssh and X
On Sun, 2002-05-19 at 06:19, Joan Tur wrote:
> Es Dissabte 18 Maig 2002 15:04,
On Sun, 2002-05-19 at 06:19, Joan Tur wrote:
> Es Dissabte 18 Maig 2002 15:04, en [EMAIL PROTECTED] va escriure:
> > On Sat, 18 May 2002, Joan Tur wrote:
> > > Hallo!
> > >
> > > After having logged in my remote computer via ssh I can run text based
> > > programs but I get "Remote host denied X11
Es Dissabte 18 Maig 2002 15:04, en [EMAIL PROTECTED] va escriure:
> On Sat, 18 May 2002, Joan Tur wrote:
> > Hallo!
> >
> > After having logged in my remote computer via ssh I can run text based
> > programs but I get "Remote host denied X11 forwarding" when trying to run
> > graphical apps...
>
>
On Sat, 18 May 2002, Joan Tur wrote:
> Hallo!
>
> After having logged in my remote computer via ssh I can run text based
> programs but I get "Remote host denied X11 forwarding" when trying to run
> graphical apps...
Look for the system sshd_config file, usually located in
/etc/ssh/sshd_confi
Hallo!
After having logged in my remote computer via ssh I can run text based
programs but I get "Remote host denied X11 forwarding" when trying to run
graphical apps...
Any idea?? 8-?
Thanks!
--
Joan Tur. Ibiza - Spain
AOL quini2k ICQ 11407395
www.ClubIbosim.org
Linux: usua
All,
Getting this error message when connected to a Mandrake 8.1 box
from a Mandrake 8.2 box via ssh. Other versions of Linux (RH SuSe)
don't get the message.
Hm, dispatch protocol error: type 3 plen 4
A site I found on the net suggested that the problem could be solved
by adding the follow
Tom Badran wrote:
>-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>Hash: SHA1
>
>I have two ssh tunnels that are run in my .bashrc file so that i can have
>secure pop/smtp.
>
>The system works great, but it does have one setback, each time i open a new
>terminal (which obviously runs bash) i get more and m
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
I have two ssh tunnels that are run in my .bashrc file so that i can have
secure pop/smtp.
The system works great, but it does have one setback, each time i open a new
terminal (which obviously runs bash) i get more and more ssh processes
running.
I'm trying to log in to my linux box FROM the internet. SSH works fine
within the LAN. It's looking like a config problem on my laptop because a
couple of friends were able to get a login screen.
At 10:41 PM 2/3/2002 -0800, James wrote:
>Just a question so I can understand. Are you trying to con
Just a question so I can understand. Are you trying to connect from a box
from outside your to a box inside your firewall? Or are you trying to
connect from inside to a box on the internet? Sorry if I'm dense...
god made me that way *grin*
James
On Sun, 03 Feb 2002 13:54:42 -0700
Lee Rob
On Sunday 03 February 2002 01:54 pm, Lee Roberts wrote:
> At 08:27 AM 1/30/2002 -0800, Deryk Barker wrote:
> >Thus spake Thomas Sourmail ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> >> > > sshd: ALL
> >> >
> >> > Sure; that lets you access via SSH from anywhere in the world.
>
> I did that and I still con't connect via
At 08:27 AM 1/30/2002 -0800, Deryk Barker wrote:
>Thus spake Thomas Sourmail ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
>
>> > > sshd: ALL
>> >
>> > Sure; that lets you access via SSH from anywhere in the world.
I did that and I still con't connect via ssh over the internet. SSH works
fine on the intranet (LAN). TCP
Dear friends, I have some question about security and SSH:
1) I test in a system runing Mandrake 8.0 a high security
level, but I had problem with the port 22: How can I get it
open?
2) I restart the low security level an ssh start to run
again, but now i can't use telnet neither ftp. In 8.1 t
Oscar wrote:
> El mié, 30-01-2002 a las 11:50, Lars Roland Kristiansen escribió:
> > On 30 Jan 2002, Oscar wrote:
> >
> > > El mié, 30-01-2002 a las 09:10, Lars Roland Kristiansen escribió:
> > > > I have just installed a mandrake server. It is configured with high
> > > > security level, and s
Thus spake Thomas Sourmail ([EMAIL PROTECTED]):
> > > sshd: ALL
> >
> > Sure; that lets you access via SSH from anywhere in the world.
>
> Just in case, some ssh servers (protocol 1) have serious security issues
> (probably not the recent openssh distr. which, I believe, is the default),
> anyw
> > sshd: ALL
>
> Sure; that lets you access via SSH from anywhere in the world.
Just in case, some ssh servers (protocol 1) have serious security issues
(probably not the recent openssh distr. which, I believe, is the default),
anyway, it's not a bad idea to disable protocol 1. Most of the clie
> I was wondering if the following is acceptable:
>
> sshd: ALL
Sure; that lets you access via SSH from anywhere in the world.
Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
Thanks for some reason i also had to put sshd1 sshd2 in there to but know
it works
On 30 Jan 2002, Oscar wrote:
> El mié, 30-01-2002 a las 11:50, Lars Roland Kristiansen escribió:
> > On 30 Jan 2002, Oscar wrote:
> >
> > > El mié, 30-01-2002 a las 09:10, Lars Roland Kristiansen escribió:
> >
El mié, 30-01-2002 a las 11:50, Lars Roland Kristiansen escribió:
> On 30 Jan 2002, Oscar wrote:
>
> > El mié, 30-01-2002 a las 09:10, Lars Roland Kristiansen escribió:
> > > I have just installed a mandrake server. It is configured with high
> > > security level, and sshd is runing. My question
On 30 Jan 2002, Oscar wrote:
> El mié, 30-01-2002 a las 09:10, Lars Roland Kristiansen escribió:
> > I have just installed a mandrake server. It is configured with high
> > security level, and sshd is runing. My question is this: where du I put
> > the ipnames of the computers that are to be allo
El mié, 30-01-2002 a las 09:10, Lars Roland Kristiansen escribió:
> I have just installed a mandrake server. It is configured with high
> security level, and sshd is runing. My question is this: where du I put
> the ipnames of the computers that are to be allowd to connect to the
> server using ss
I have just installed a mandrake server. It is configured with high
security level, and sshd is runing. My question is this: where du I put
the ipnames of the computers that are to be allowd to connect to the
server using ssh. I have put the names in /etc/hosts.allow but this doesnt
seam to be eno
Where is the Mac client for TighVNC? I just can find the UNIX, Windows
and java ones.
On Mon, 2002-01-21 at 16:57, James Sparenberg wrote:
> Having used VNC almost daily for a year I can offer the following. TightVNC is the
>least bandwidth intensive. Available at tightvnc.com There are cli
> Having used VNC almost daily for a year I can offer the following.
TightVNC is the least bandwidth intensive. Available at tightvnc.com There
are clients for Windows, Linux, (linux builds on FreeBSD) and Mac. Viewing
Linux on windows is better than the other way around. Since Windows doesn't
Having used VNC almost daily for a year I can offer the following. TightVNC is the
least bandwidth intensive. Available at tightvnc.com There are clients for Windows,
Linux, (linux builds on FreeBSD) and Mac. Viewing Linux on windows is better than the
other way around. Since Windows doesn
On Fri Jan 18, 2002 at 09:20:28PM -0700, Lee Roberts wrote:
> I'm trying to figure out how to make that work with my Win2K machine. I'm
> using ttsh on the Win2K PC to establish an SSH connection with the Linux
> machine. There's an option in ttssh for running remote X apps on the local
> X serve
On Sat, Jan 19, 2002 at 08:01:50PM -0700, Lee Roberts said:
> At 07:17 PM 1/19/2002 -0600, G. T. Francisco, III wrote:
> >On Sat, Jan 19, 2002 at 11:58:06AM -0700, Lee Roberts said:
> >> I can get an SSH session from the intranet but not from the internet.
> >> A port scan shows TCP port 22 open b
At 07:17 PM 1/19/2002 -0600, G. T. Francisco, III wrote:
>On Sat, Jan 19, 2002 at 11:58:06AM -0700, Lee Roberts said:
>> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>> Hash: SHA1
>>
>> I can get an SSH session from the intranet but not from the internet.
>> A port scan shows TCP port 22 open but the conne
On Sat, Jan 19, 2002 at 11:58:06AM -0700, Lee Roberts said:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> I can get an SSH session from the intranet but not from the internet.
> A port scan shows TCP port 22 open but the connection is refused when
> trying to connect to my Linux box from
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
I can get an SSH session from the intranet but not from the internet.
A port scan shows TCP port 22 open but the connection is refused when
trying to connect to my Linux box from the internet. I probably have
a config file problem. Can someone save me
At 09:03 PM 1/18/2002 -0500, Michael Osten wrote:
>
> f8c28c.jpg> Re [expert]
> SSH1.ems Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
> Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
>
>
> *** PGP Signature Status: bad
> *** Signer: Michael Osten <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> (Invalid)
> *** Signed: 1/18/2002 7:03:19 PM
>
I'm trying to figure out how to make that work with my Win2K machine. I'm
using ttsh on the Win2K PC to establish an SSH connection with the Linux
machine. There's an option in ttssh for running remote X apps on the local
X server but there doesn't appear to be a listing for an X server in the
Win
Some where in the universe on 19 Jan 2002 02:47:50 +0100
The Spam Disposal Plant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> ever tried "ssh -X user@host", that should set the display automagically
> for you
>
> udo
>
> On Sat, 2002-01-19 at 01:32, Lee Roberts wrote:
> > What do I need to do to run apps when
ever tried "ssh -X user@host", that should set the display automagically
for you
udo
On Sat, 2002-01-19 at 01:32, Lee Roberts wrote:
> What do I need to do to run apps when logged in with SSH? When I try to run
> apps, I get a message that $DISPLAY isn't set. I don't seem to be able to
> find an
i, 18 Jan 2002 17:32:48 -0700
>> From: Lee Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> Subject: [expert] SSH
>>
>> What do I need to do to run apps when logged in with SSH? When I try to run
>> apps, I get a mes
I didn't do su. I logged in as a normal user (but I do have root privaledges).
The apps that I was executing are user executable programs.
At 08:09 PM 1/18/2002 -0500, Michael Osten wrote:
>
> 60f795.jpg> Re [expert]
> SSH.ems Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
> Content-Transfer-Encodin
hmm...
are you trying to run apps with gui interface remotly from terminal ? ;)
On Fri, 18 Jan 2002, Lee Roberts wrote:
> Date: Fri, 18 Jan 2002 17:32:48 -0700
> From: Lee Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [exper
Some where in the universe on Fri, 18 Jan 2002 17:32:48 -0700
Lee Roberts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> What do I need to do to run apps when logged in with SSH? When I try to
run
> apps, I get a message that $DISPLAY isn't set. I don't seem to be able
to
> find anything for setting up that enviro
What do I need to do to run apps when logged in with SSH? When I try to run
apps, I get a message that $DISPLAY isn't set. I don't seem to be able to
find anything for setting up that environment variable.
Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft?
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com
t and it works well...
portsentry has done this since ver 1 or before. (it worked on Mandrake7.2)
rgds
Frank
-Original Message-
From: Michael Viron [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, 18 January 2002 12:04 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [expert] SSH message not to panic
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