Thanks for taking the time to report this bug. You need to make sure,
that the locale on the client and the server are the same. Therefore you
need to generate the locales on the server. If you do not know, what
"locales" are, feel free to ask on Ubuntu Answers. If you are absolutely
sure, that you
** Description changed:
I changed our server password to include some special characters (e.g., ¿).
After that, I can't login to that server from my linux box (openssh-client nor
putty). On other Windows box I can login without problem. I changed again the
password to exclude the special char
** Description changed:
I changed our server password to include some special characters (e.g., ¿).
After that, I can't login to that server from my linux box (openssh-client nor
putty). On other Windows box I can login without problem. I changed again the
password to exclude the special char
Thanks for taking the time to report this bug. You need to make sure,
that the locale on the client and the server are the same. Therefore you
need to generate the locales on the server. If you do not know, what
"locales" are, feel free to ask on Ubuntu Answers. If you are absolutely
sure, that you
Thanks for taking the time to report this bug. You need to make sure,
that the locale on the client and the server are the same. Therefore you
need to generate the locales on the server. If you do not know, what
"locales" are, feel free to ask on Ubuntu Answers. If you are absolutely
sure, that you
** Description changed:
I changed our server password to include some special characters (e.g., ¿).
After that, I can't login to that server from my linux box (openssh-client nor
putty). On other Windows box I can login without problem. I changed again the
password to exclude the special char
** Description changed:
I changed our server password to include some special characters (e.g., ¿).
After that, I can't login to that server from my linux box (openssh-client nor
putty). On other Windows box I can login without problem. I changed again the
password to exclude the special char
Thanks for taking the time to report this bug. You need to make sure,
that the locale on the client and the server are the same. Therefore you
need to generate the locales on the server. If you do not know, what
"locales" are, feel free to ask on Ubuntu Answers. If you are absolutely
sure, that you
** Description changed:
I changed our server password to include some special characters (e.g., ¿).
After that, I can't login to that server from my linux box (openssh-client nor
putty). On other Windows box I can login without problem. I changed again the
password to exclude the special char
Thanks for taking the time to report this bug. You need to make sure,
that the locale on the client and the server are the same. Therefore you
need to generate the locales on the server. If you do not know, what
"locales" are, feel free to ask on Ubuntu Answers. If you are absolutely
sure, that you
** Description changed:
I changed our server password to include some special characters (e.g., ¿).
After that, I can't login to that server from my linux box (openssh-client nor
putty). On other Windows box I can login without problem. I changed again the
password to exclude the special char
Thanks for taking the time to report this bug. You need to make sure,
that the locale on the client and the server are the same. Therefore you
need to generate the locales on the server. If you do not know, what
"locales" are, feel free to ask on Ubuntu Answers. If you are absolutely
sure, that you
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