On Wed, 23 Oct 2019, wes wrote: > a) No, they generally do not.
Well, that's the way I was taught to do it in the '90s. > b) That is not the only non-standard aspect to your setup. By convention, > the router is always set to .1 on whatever network it's routing for. > However there is no law that states this must be the case; your router can > have whatever IP you want it to. It just means there will be more > opportunities for confusion when people try to help you :) 127.0.0.1 localhost.localdomain localhost 127.0.1.1 salmo.appl-ecosys.com salmo # for slrn 192.168.55.1 salmo.appl-ecosys.com salmo mail # desktop server 192.168.55.2 caddis.appl-ecosys.com caddis # Dell E5410 192.168.55.3 lemna.appl-ecosys.com lemna # Dell 2100 192.168.55.4 router1.appl-ecosys.com router1 # LinkSys 192.168.55.5 pachy.appl-ecosys.com pachy # Sony Vaio 192.168.55.6 typha.appl-ecosys.com typha # ThinkPad X200 192.168.55.7 baetis.appl-ecosys.com baetis # Currently unassigned 192.168.55.192 lj5.appl-ecosys.com lj5 192.168.55.194 colorp.appl-ecosys.com colorp 192.168.55.200 wap.appl-ecosys.com wap # End of hosts. > Ok, since you just did this, what does ssh localhost (as root) give you now? As before: # ssh localhost Permission denied (publickey). > Maybe if we get this figured out, we can update the documentation to clear > this up for other users in the future. That would be helpful. Regards, Rich _______________________________________________ Dirvish mailing list [email protected] http://www.dirvish.org/mailman/listinfo/dirvish
