quote=" . . so that we don't need to either provide user account . . "
that is what chaoson said ! With rsh you must provide user and password on the remote host ! also like telnet ! I remember to all of you that rsh or telnet are an input/output redirection of a console thru sockets ! ! cheers 2008/10/14 Kosala Atapattu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > running commands with Netcat... even wierder.... > > This is not the answer to your question. May be you can try good old > "rsh" with the "hosts.allowed"... In some internal networks (withing > the same net zone) I have used that lot... where security is not much > of a concern. > > Kosala > > 2008/10/14 Christian Grunfeld <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: >> Hi, >> >> strange question in a ssh discussion list ! >> May be you can use netcat on both sides with standar input and output >> redirected from/to a console. >> >> Cheers >> Christian >> >> >> 2008/10/13, chaoson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: >>> Hi, >>> >>> I'm running openssh-4.3p2. >>> >>> I need to ability to run a command on trusted machine remotely. So far as >>> I know, we can use two ways to login to remote machine: >>> 1) Provide user name and password >>> 2) Public key authentication >>> >>> My question is that can we disable the SSH authentication so that we don't >>> need to either provide user account or the public key? Does anyone has the >>> idea? Thanks >>> >>> >>> >>> ___________________________________________________________ >>> 雅虎邮箱,您的终生邮箱! >>> http://cn.mail.yahoo.com/ >>> >> > > > > -- > Kosala > -------------------------------------------- > Disclaimer: Views expressed in this mail are my personal views and > they would not reflect views of the employer. > -------------------------------------------- > blog.kosala.net > www.linux.lk/~kosala/ > www.kosala.net >