On Fri, Jun 01, 2001 at 11:47:05PM -0500, will trillich wrote:
> it took me a while to figure out that "ssh" contains "sshd"
> whereas, say, "telnet" is the client and "telnetd" is the
> server. with "ssh" the package wonk put all pieces into the one
> package, so you get both client and server in
On Thu, May 17, 2001 at 04:20:43PM -0700, Eric Richardson wrote:
> Alex Strasheim wrote:
> >
> > I'm having the same problem (can't login), and hosts.deny didn't solve it.
> > I can't ssh to localhost either.
> >
> > I'm new to debian, and I'm just trying to get a usable system set up -- one
> >
Alex Strasheim wrote:
>
> I'm having the same problem (can't login), and hosts.deny didn't solve it.
> I can't ssh to localhost either.
>
> I'm new to debian, and I'm just trying to get a usable system set up -- one
> that I can ssh into. I haven't figured out the package management system
> ver
I'm having the same problem (can't login), and hosts.deny didn't solve it.
I can't ssh to localhost either.
I'm new to debian, and I'm just trying to get a usable system set up -- one
that I can ssh into. I haven't figured out the package management system
very well, so I dl'd and built my own Op
also sprach Cameron Matheson (on Thu, 17 May 2001 04:42:19PM -0600):
> I have a little problem w/ ssh. Me and a few other folks started a free web-
> hosting company, and I'm supposed to be the sysadmin. The server's at someone
> elses house, so I am supposed to ssh in. For some reason, it alway
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