[...]
This doesn't really make sense. Are you sure that you didn't connect
by hand in pather once, and answer the query about whether you would
accept the certificate or not? Once the certificate was accepted,
perl in Panther might have been accessing the user's .ssh?
I reboot the machines an
On Jun 24, 2005, at 5:47 PM, Joel Rees wrote:
On 2005.6.25, at 08:35 AM, Ted Zeng wrote:
My problem is it provides much more than I need.
Are your sure?
Of cause I am sure.
I just need to log in to another Mac to execute
commands there. I don't care securities, or anything.
rlogin is go
On 2005.6.25, at 09:55 AM, Chris Devers wrote:
On Sat, 25 Jun 2005, Joel Rees wrote:
msn.com and hotmail.com users take note --
Microsoft wants to refuse my mail if I don't use SenderID starting
November.
SenderID was refused as an internet standard and does not stop SPAM,
^
On Sat, 25 Jun 2005, Joel Rees wrote:
> msn.com and hotmail.com users take note --
> Microsoft wants to refuse my mail if I don't use SenderID starting November.
> SenderID was refused as an internet standard and does not stop SPAM,
> and it contains
On 2005.6.25, at 08:35 AM, Ted Zeng wrote:
My problem is it provides much more than I need.
Are your sure?
I just need to log in to another Mac to execute
commands there. I don't care securities, or anything.
rlogin is good enough for me.
Well, there is a company taking contracts from the
: I know how to circumvent this. But I would like to know why they
behave
: differently.
: I have assumed they should be the same.
If you want to know the gory details of .login, .bash_login, .profile,
and
.bash_profile, and which ones get invoked when and in what order, do
"man
bash", read t
My problem is it provides much more than I need.
I just need to log in to another Mac to execute
commands there. I don't care securities, or anything.
rlogin is good enough for me.
I don't want to copy a public key over to that machine ( I don't have to
in Panther. But have to in Tiger) before I
Ted Zeng wrote:
> Thanks. You make it very clear.
> I have assumed they should be the same.
>
>>
> I took a look at Net::SSH and it seems it is not what
> I want. It is much easier to install Net::SSH though.
>
> SSH has been a big headache to me. I wish OS X
> just has telnet. It is good enough
On Fri, 24 Jun 2005, Ted Zeng wrote:
:
: I know how to circumvent this. But I would like to know why they behave
: differently.
: I have assumed they should be the same.
If you want to know the gory details of .login, .bash_login, .profile, and
.bash_profile, and which ones get invoked when and
Chris,
I know how to circumvent this. But I would like to know why they behave
differently.
I have assumed they should be the same.
Thanks,
ted zeng
On Jun 24, 2005, at 11:41 AM, Chris Devers wrote:
On Fri, 24 Jun 2005, Ted Zeng wrote:
Why the system behaves differently when I ssh to a m
Thanks. You make it very clear.
I have assumed they should be the same.
I took a look at Net::SSH and it seems it is not what
I want. It is much easier to install Net::SSH though.
SSH has been a big headache to me. I wish OS X
just has telnet. It is good enough for my purpose.
I wish SSH has a
Ted Zeng wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Why the system behaves differently when I ssh to a machine
> from Terminal than when I ssh to the same machine by Perl's SSH module?
>
> Here is the problem:
> I added a tool to /usr/local/bin. I updated the profile file.
> Now if I ssh to the machine, I could use "which
On Fri, 24 Jun 2005, Ted Zeng wrote:
> Why the system behaves differently when I ssh to a machine from
> Terminal than when I ssh to the same machine by Perl's SSH module?
It sounds like the script is getting the default system $PATH variable,
while the shell is getting the $PATH defined in you
Hi,
Why the system behaves differently when I ssh to a machine
from Terminal than when I ssh to the same machine by Perl's SSH module?
Here is the problem:
I added a tool to /usr/local/bin. I updated the profile file.
Now if I ssh to the machine, I could use "which tool" to find it.
But when I
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