On Wednesday 06 November 2002 11:58 am, Paul Campbell wrote: > look for a .ssh directory in your $HOME directory. > It has a known_hosts file. > I do rm -rf .ssh
> > i don't like having to delete stuff outta > > known_hosts every time i wanna ssh into a different one of my home > > computers. well anyways i ended up making two different names in /etc/hosts for the same ip address which works better, but ssh still gives me a warning. christopher > At 08:50 AM 11/6/02, you wrote: > >ok, > >i got computer A running sshd listening for connections on port a, i got > >computer B running sshd listening for connections on port b. both are > > behind a hardware firewall that forwards stuff on port a to computer A > > and stuff on port b to computer B. the hardware firewall is also my > > gateway. lets call my ip address X. > > > >now the problem is sshing from a single machine to both computers A and B. > >consider sshing to computer A: > >ssh -p a X > >yes to creating a key in known_hosts for ip address X > >now if i issue the following command to get into computer B: > >ssh -p b X > >ssh bombs out with a failure message about the RSA host key has changed. > >obviously cuz computers A and B are different machines, but known_hosts > > has one key entry for both of them (cuz they share the same ip address). > > > >what can i do about this? i don't like having to delete stuff outta > >known_hosts every time i wanna ssh into a different one of my home > > computers. > > > >thanks, > >christopher > > > > > > > >-- > >redhat-list mailing list > >unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@;redhat.com?subject=unsubscribe > >https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@;redhat.com?subject=unsubscribe https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list