Hi,
Whenever I start the vserver, init scripts accessing /dev/null (or any
subsequent commands) returns Permission denied. Re-creating /dev/null
outside the vserver does not help. ls -l shows this is a proper device
file:
Ensure the partition were your vserver is located is not mounted with
firewalling / routing / etc
issue. `tcpdump' and `netstat -plunt' are also highly recommended.
Sam.
On Sat, 13 Mar 2004 06:02, Cedric Veilleux wrote;
Thanks for the hint, but unfortunately, even after restarting sshd, I
still have the same problem.
Thank you.
--
Cedric Veilleux
Hi,
I am sorry for posting about such a basic issue. I do not use the vserver script to build the vservers, and I haven't found a clear answer to this question on the Wiki...
So, what are the minimum devices required inside a vserver? This must be documented somewhere so if someone can
Thanks for the hint, but unfortunately, even after restarting sshd, I still have the same problem.
Thank you.
--
Cedric Veilleux
On Fri, 2004-03-12 at 11:39, Gregory (Grisha) Trubetskoy wrote:
Have you tried restarting sshd after starting vserver:
# vserver blah exec service sshd
Hi,
After upgrading from an old-world 2.4.20ctx-17 to 2.4.25-vs1.26, I
can no longer login to an SSH server running inside a vserver.
Beside the change to the host server, nothing has changed with the
virtual server.
When login in with openssh's ssh client, it just hangs there
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On November 18, 2003 05:56 pm, ian douglas wrote:
any 'gtochas' that you care to share up-front?
I've never even seen gentoo, I'm just getting the ISO's onto my system now
to burn CD's to see what the installation is like. A buddy of mine says