On Jan 9, 2006, at 1:57 AM, Leonidas Tsampros wrote:
On Mon, Jan 09, 2006 at 12:32:00AM -0800, Robert Stevenson wrote:
I'm able to log-in to my FreeBSD box using SSH just a
few days ago, but now I can't. Whenever I try I only
get to enter my username and the password prompt does
not appear anym
On Mon, Jan 09, 2006 at 12:32:00AM -0800, Robert Stevenson wrote:
> I'm able to log-in to my FreeBSD box using SSH just a
> few days ago, but now I can't. Whenever I try I only
> get to enter my username and the password prompt does
> not appear anymore. It seems authentication stops
> after I ente
On Tuesday 02 March 2004 01:27, HOLLOW, CHRISTOPHER wrote:
> > This arrangement is only to facilitate Administor's job. He operates
> > outside contact as 'user' from there if necessary he can login as root
> > doing maintenance.
>
> Granting the person root access is one thing. Allowing root log
This arrangement is only to facilitate Administor's job. He operates outside
contact as 'user' from there if necessary he can login as root doing
maintenance.
Granting the person root access is one thing. Allowing root logins via
SSH is something different. What Nathan (and security experts
Stephen Liu wrote:
- snip -
You say that this works as root, but your example seems to indicate
otherwise. By default, root logins via ssh is disabled in the sshd
config file, usually at /etc/ssh/sshd_config. If for some reason you
want to allow root logins via ssh then uncomment the followin
- snip -
>
> You say that this works as root, but your example seems to indicate
> otherwise. By default, root logins via ssh is disabled in the sshd
> config file, usually at /etc/ssh/sshd_config. If for some reason you
> want to allow root logins via ssh then uncomment the following line and
>
On Tue, Mar 02, 2004 at 01:52:37AM +0800, Stephen Liu wrote:
> Hi all folks,
>
> FreeBSD 5.2
> ===
>
> I can as 'root'
>
> # ssh -X [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> tunneling to 'user' but it does not work as 'user'
>
> $ ssh -X [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Password:
> Password:
> Password:
> [EMAIL PR
Hi,
Remote rootlogin's are disabled .. which is good for security reasons,
what do you mean with "it does not work as user"
You login under ssh -X [EMAIL PROTECTED] which then gives you a shell
for $user when you properly authorized. After that you can use X11,
You mean that X11 does not run as
Huh. It was there! I thought that there might be a second sshd
config file somewhere on the system, but locate and find never reported
it. Weird. But everything's working as required, so I'm very
happy. Thanks for all the help guys!!
At 10:54 PM 2/13/04 -0500, matthew wrote:
On F
On Fri, 13 Feb 2004, Dragoncrest wrote:
> Ok, I finally figured out why my configs weren't loading for
> ssh. Apparently when you startup SSHD it loads some weird default
> sshd_config file that I can't seem to find. However, if I specify "sshd -f
> /etc/ssh/sshd_config" it will load my
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Alex Zivenko
> Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2003 7:34 PM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: SSH problem, delay ---??? How to fix?
>
> Hi!
> When I am trying to connect to my FreeBSD server, I have a
Hello,
On Tue, 2003-09-16 at 18:33, Alex Zivenko wrote:
> Hi!
> When I am trying to connect to my FreeBSD server, I have a problem. It's not a very
> big problem, but I want to fix it anyway. When I'm connecting to my FreeBSD machine
> I have a big delay. It's very strange, when I'm working all
On Friday 05 September 2003 12:09 pm, Alex Zivenko wrote:
> All known utility ssh.
> How can I configure it?
> I have one FreeBSD 4.8 machine in my net. I need to setup an ssh access
> there for some win-users. I use telneat for it.
>
> I have a problem with it. When I'm trying to connect to this
At 02:44 PM 7/17/2002 -0400, Ryan Masse wrote:
>I have several FreeBSD machines in production all running sshd as the sole
>method of terminal services. I have one machine in particular that is
>producing rather strange results when trying to ssh into the machine. I have
>c/p a snipet of the outpu
The reason why this output would have come up is that you might have
initialized the system to use the S/Key one time passwords -- probably using
keyinit.
I don't know exactly how to get rid of the problem (I myself have it too),
but you can set the password to your login password using keyinit
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