On Wed, 2006-04-26 at 14:58 -0700, Steve Lamb wrote: > Steve Lamb wrote: > > Joey Hess wrote: > >> Many embedded systems don't have swap. ssh in inetd worked ok last time > >> I used it as long as speed was not important. > > > Thanks, Joey, I'll give it a whirl later on and let everyone know. Was > > just hoping that it was a question on dpkg-reconfigure that I was missing. > > Ok, the directions that Greg gave were spot on with the exception of the > missed -i at the end of the inetd.conf line. Also I needed to get rid of the > rc.d symlinks with a quick: > cd /etc > rm rc*.d/*ssh
update-rc.d -f ssh remove has the same effect, please remember that *IF* you upgrade you ssh installation those links will com back with either method. But you see, if the file "/etc/ssh/sshd_not_to_be_run" exists the init.d script should just exit. It is why I didn't mention doing that removal. Here is the start portion of the init.d script: case "$1" in start) check_for_no_start check_privsep_dir echo -n "Starting OpenBSD Secure Shell server: sshd" start-stop-daemon --start --quiet --pidfile /var/run/sshd.pid --exec /usr/sbin/sshd -- $SSHD_OPTS echo "." ;; The Function check_for_no_start check_for_no_start() { # forget it if we're trying to start, and /etc/ssh/sshd_not_to_be_run exists if [ -e /etc/ssh/sshd_not_to_be_run ]; then echo "OpenBSD Secure Shell server not in use (/etc/ssh/sshd_not_to_be_run)" exit 0 fi } > Also somehow flubbed stopping sshd and restarting inetd and locked myself > out. The funny part is that it reminded me I have ssh access to my machine's > console so if it weren't for scp I could always just ssh to the console and > take up no RAM regardless. Never logout of said machine completely until you can login back in Even if you stop ssh as a daemon you won't kill you current session. -- greg, [EMAIL PROTECTED] The technology that is Stronger, better, faster: Linux
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