Re: user problem

2004-04-06 Thread Igor Pechtchanski
Alex, Assuming your username is "lex", use "ssh [EMAIL PROTECTED]". And, as Corinna said, you'll need an sshd running before you can do this. Igor P.S. . On Tue, 6 Apr 2004, Alex Scott wrote: > When I try to SSH I get: > > ssh: lex: no address

Re: user problem

2004-04-06 Thread Corinna Vinschen
On Apr 6 11:18, Alex Scott wrote: > When I try to SSH I get: > > ssh: lex: no address associated with name > > Though the user is in my /etc/passwd and should be mapping through?? That has nothing to do with the user. You must install an sshd daemon and follow the instructions and man pages.

Re: user problem

2004-04-06 Thread Alex Scott
When I try to SSH I get: ssh: lex: no address associated with name Though the user is in my /etc/passwd and should be mapping through?? --- arc On Tue, 6 Apr 2004 12:11:05 +0200, "Corinna Vinschen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said: > On Apr 6 10:55, Alex Scott wrote: > > Hi there, > > > > I have use

Re: user problem

2004-04-06 Thread Corinna Vinschen
On Apr 6 10:55, Alex Scott wrote: > Hi there, > > I have used mkpasswd -d to make a /etc/passwd file. > > But when I try to chown a file with my domain user the ownerships are not > changing??? You don't have the NT user rights necessary to perform chown. > Also when I try to su to that user m

user problem

2004-04-06 Thread Alex Scott
Hi there, I have used mkpasswd -d to make a /etc/passwd file. But when I try to chown a file with my domain user the ownerships are not changing??? Also when I try to su to that user my password is not being accepted, but it should be the same as the one I use for windows??? How can I do these t