As it turns out, the system wrote /etc/nologin and /etc/nologin.boot when I
rebooted the system (I didn't have to, but without console access, it was a
LOT easier that way).
It didn't remove them after startup, thus normal users couldn't log in.
Thanks for all the suggestions.
At 10:35 PM -0700 4
At 987701236s since epoch (04/19/01 06:27:16 -0400 UTC), Andre Berger wrote:
> * Deirdre Saoirse Moen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 2001-04-19 09:53 +0200:
> >
> > (I'm still waiting for DNS to catch up with me...)
Perhaps that's your problem... do you have "ReverseMappingCheck" set to
"yes" in your /etc
> "Deirdre" == Deirdre Saoirse Moen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Deirdre> I rebooted my system today (probably after a few too many things
were
Deirdre> changed) and all of a sudden I can't ssh in as a normal user.
Deirdre> I've got a fairly minimal system, but it seems a strange
* Andre Berger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 2001-04-19 12:43 +0200:
> * Deirdre Saoirse Moen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 2001-04-19 09:53 +0200:
> > I rebooted my system today (probably after a few too many things were
> > changed) and all of a sudden I can't ssh in as a normal user.
> >
> > I've got a fairly mi
* Deirdre Saoirse Moen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 2001-04-19 09:53 +0200:
> I rebooted my system today (probably after a few too many things were
> changed) and all of a sudden I can't ssh in as a normal user.
>
> I've got a fairly minimal system, but it seems a strange thing to break
> upon reboot. All
* Deirdre Saoirse Moen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [010419 00:27]:
> I rebooted my system today (probably after a few too many things were
> changed) and all of a sudden I can't ssh in as a normal user.
does this mean you *can* ssh as root? or does it mean you can't ssh in
at all?
> I've got a fairly mi
6 matches
Mail list logo