On Thu 03 Jun 2021 at 17:23:43 (-0400), Frank Pikelner wrote:
> It is much better to use SSH certificates, not a great deal of extra work,
> but well worth it. Simplifies management and works well for automation.
Thanks for the top-posted explanation.
The references were useful too.
> On Thu, Jun
It is much better to use SSH certificates, not a great deal of extra work,
but well worth it. Simplifies management and works well for automation.
Best,
Frank
On Thu, Jun 3, 2021 at 5:15 PM David Wright
wrote:
> On Sat 29 May 2021 at 18:25:50 (-0400), Bob Weber wrote:
>
> > Now follow the inst
On Sat 29 May 2021 at 18:25:50 (-0400), Bob Weber wrote:
> Now follow the instructions at:
>
> https://linuxize.com/post/how-to-setup-passwordless-ssh-login/
>
> You will need to follow those instructions for each linux server you
> want to backup. The .ssh directory will be under the directory
On 5/29/21 16:12, Gary L. Roach wrote:
Operating System: Debian GNU/Linux 10
KDE Plasma Version: 5.14.5
Qt Version: 5.11.3
KDE Frameworks Version: 5.54.0
Kernel Version: 4.19.0-16-amd64
OS Type: 64-bit
Processors: 4 Ã AMD FX(tm)-4350 Quad-Core Processor
Memory: 15.6 GiB of RAM
I have been tryin
On 2021-05-29 21:12, Gary L. Roach wrote:
Operating System: Debian GNU/Linux 10
KDE Plasma Version: 5.14.5
Qt Version: 5.11.3
KDE Frameworks Version: 5.54.0
Kernel Version: 4.19.0-16-amd64
OS Type: 64-bit
Processors: 4 × AMD FX(tm)-4350 Quad-Core Processor
Memory: 15.6 GiB of RAM
I have been try
Hello Russel,
I am suspecting an issue on the server side.
Can you provide a verbose log of the server side,
Regards,
Franklin
On Tue, 2010-04-06 at 20:00 -0700, Russell L. Carter wrote:
>
> On my main system I have two user accounts, 'rcarter' and 'sardine'. I
> remove the .ssh directories f
On 10-04-06 16:06:14, d.sastre.med...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 06, 2010 at 03:24:04PM -0400, Tony Nelson wrote:
> > On 10-04-06 14:12:19, Russell L. Carter wrote:
> > > r...@feyerabend> diff -u ssh_config ssh_config.dpkg-dist
> > > --- ssh_config 2010-04-05 21:14:26.172871668 -0700
> > > +++
Ryan Manikowski wrote:
On 4/6/2010 4:37 PM, Russell L. Carter wrote:
What you're trying to do here is login to the 'root' account using your
non-root account to initiate the ssh connection. It is reading the
'id_rsa.pub' pubkey file from /home//.ssh/ and this is why it is
failing. The non-r
On 4/6/2010 4:37 PM, Russell L. Carter wrote:
> First, I'm new to this list and how do you all want me to handle
> replies? Rather than the two individuals that show up with
> reply-all, I've just replied directly to the list. If that's not
> what you want, please let me know.
>
> Ryan Manikowsk
On Tue, 6 Apr 2010 16:23:35 -0400 (EDT), Jordan Metzmeier wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 6, 2010 at 4:14 PM, Stephen Powell wrote:
>> On Tue, 6 Apr 2010 14:12:19 -0400 (EDT), Russell L. Carter wrote:
>>>
>>> I dist-upgraded yesterday and ssh root logins started requiring a
>>> password.
>>
>> OK, I'll bite.
First, I'm new to this list and how do you all want me to handle
replies? Rather than the two individuals that show up with
reply-all, I've just replied directly to the list. If that's not
what you want, please let me know.
Ryan Manikowski wrote:
Run this command as the user you would like to
On Tue, Apr 6, 2010 at 4:14 PM, Stephen Powell wrote:
> On Tue, 6 Apr 2010 14:12:19 -0400 (EDT), Russell L. Carter wrote:
>>
>> I dist-upgraded yesterday and ssh root logins started requiring a
>> password.
>
> OK, I'll bite. Not that this is any of my business, but why do you
> allow *root* logi
On Tue, 6 Apr 2010 14:12:19 -0400 (EDT), Russell L. Carter wrote:
>
> I dist-upgraded yesterday and ssh root logins started requiring a
> password.
OK, I'll bite. Not that this is any of my business, but why do you
allow *root* logins via *ssh* _without_ a password. Isn't that dangerous?
At my s
Run this command as the user you would like to login with via ssh and
send back the results:
ssh -
Ryan Manikowski
]] Devision Media Services LLC [[
www.devision.us
r...@devision.us | 716.771.2282
On 4/6/2010 4:06 PM, d.sastre.med...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 06,
On Tue, Apr 06, 2010 at 03:24:04PM -0400, Tony Nelson wrote:
> On 10-04-06 14:12:19, Russell L. Carter wrote:
> > r...@feyerabend> diff -u ssh_config ssh_config.dpkg-dist
> > --- ssh_config 2010-04-05 21:14:26.172871668 -0700
> > +++ ssh_config.dpkg-dist2010-01-04 09:05:12.0 -0700
On 10-04-06 14:12:19, Russell L. Carter wrote:
>
> I dist-upgraded yesterday and ssh root logins started requiring a
> password. ...
...
> r...@feyerabend> diff -u ssh_config ssh_config.dpkg-dist
> --- ssh_config 2010-04-05 21:14:26.172871668 -0700
> +++ ssh_config.dpkg-dist2010-01-04 09
On Tue, Apr 06, 2010 at 11:12:19AM -0700, Russell L. Carter wrote:
> VERY CAREFULLY checked .ssh and authorized_keys permissions,
> etc. No change. This affects both user->r...@localhost ssh logins
Hello,
Could you try to add a new user in the box you want to log in, and
create a ~/.ssh/authoriz
very nicely explained! (interested in fleshing this out some to
make a newbiedoc out of it? :)
On Wed, Jun 02, 2004 at 07:37:42AM -0700, Bill Moseley wrote:
> And in case anyone finds this in the archive, on SSH Secure
> Shell you need to convert the keys. So on Debian, create a
> keypair called
On Wed, Jun 02, 2004 at 01:02:08AM -0500, Will Trillich wrote:
> for passwordless SSH-ing, try this (and feel free to augment or
> correct if i overlook something)--
>
> localbox$ ssh-keygen -t dsa
>
> after some q&a (just answer with blanks, for passwordless
> connections) this creates a ~
* Joerg Johannes ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [031204 07:36]:
> Am Mi, den 03.12.2003 schrieb Vineet Kumar um 21:32:
> Hmmm. I don't have ~/.Xsession, and in /etc/X11/Xsession.option the
> "use-ssh-agent" line is present. Still, it is not used.
> I poked around a bit and changed my /etc/gdm/Sessions/Icewm.
Am Mi, den 03.12.2003 schrieb Vineet Kumar um 21:32:
> * Joerg Johannes ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [031203 08:08]:
> > Am Di, den 02.12.2003 schrieb Joerg Johannes um 09:25:
> > > I am starting Debian X environment using gdm, but after logging in, I
> > > can't find ssh-agent in ps -ae. Only see it after
* Joerg Johannes ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [031203 08:08]:
> Am Di, den 02.12.2003 schrieb Joerg Johannes um 09:25:
> > I am starting Debian X environment using gdm, but after logging in, I
> > can't find ssh-agent in ps -ae. Only see it after starting it by hand.
How are you starting it? The best way
On Wed, 03 Dec 2003 17:06:13 +0100
Joerg Johannes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
...
> Maybe related to that: I have tried setting up passwordless login
to
> another machine using the steps mentioned in the micro-howto:
> Succeeded. I don't have to enter my password any more. Even worse: I
> have to en
Am Di, den 02.12.2003 schrieb Joerg Johannes um 09:25:
> Am Mo, den 01.12.2003 schrieb Greg Folkert um 21:22:
> > On Mon, 2003-12-01 at 12:29, Joerg Johannes wrote:
> > > Hi everybody
> > >
> > > Is it possible to use different login names on different machines in
> > > combination with passwordle
* Bob Proulx ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [031201 22:33]:
> Vineet Kumar wrote:
> > On a sort of tangent, you can use your ~/.ssh/options to save yourself
>
> A small thing. It is ~/.ssh/config not options.
Yes, that's correct; I mistyped it.
good times,
Vineet
--
http://www.doorstop.net/
--
"Great sp
Vineet Kumar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>* Joerg Johannes ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [031201 09:52]:
>>Hi everybody
>>
>>Is it possible to use different login names on different machines in
>>combination with passwordless ssh logins? My situation is the
>>following:
>
>Yes, the key setup is completely i
Am Mo, den 01.12.2003 schrieb Vineet Kumar um 19:34:
> * Joerg Johannes ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [031201 09:52]:
> > Hi everybody
> >
> > Is it possible to use different login names on different machines in
> > combination with passwordless ssh logins? My situation is the following:
>
> Yes, the key s
Am Mo, den 01.12.2003 schrieb Greg Folkert um 21:22:
> On Mon, 2003-12-01 at 12:29, Joerg Johannes wrote:
> > Hi everybody
> >
> > Is it possible to use different login names on different machines in
> > combination with passwordless ssh logins? My situation is the following:
> > I have my noteboo
Niko Efthymiou wrote:
> Greg Folkert wrote:
> > Are you running Debian X environment?
> > If you are they have already setup an ssh-agent for your login.
>
> strange on my mashine (Debian/unstable) ssh-agent it isen't setup :/
> ssh-add just says: "Could not open a connection to your authenticati
Vineet Kumar wrote:
> On a sort of tangent, you can use your ~/.ssh/options to save yourself
A small thing. It is ~/.ssh/config not options.
Bob
P.S. I double checked unstable just to make sure I was not missing
something.
pgp0.pgp
Description: PGP signature
Joerg Johannes wrote:
> http://www.cs.umd.edu/~arun/misc/ssh.html
> but the one machine I tried so far asked me for my password even after
> generating keys and copying to the machine over there. Can someboy help
> me setting this up?
Check the permissions of files. If they are group writable
(de
Greg Folkert wrote:
> Are you running Debian X environment?
> If you are they have already setup an ssh-agent for your login.
>
> run: ssh-add for you various keys... and voila you are good.
>
> You still have to enter the passphrase initially for each key, but then
> after which you don't.
strang
On Mon, 2003-12-01 at 12:29, Joerg Johannes wrote:
> Hi everybody
>
> Is it possible to use different login names on different machines in
> combination with passwordless ssh logins? My situation is the following:
> I have my notebook, where my user account is called "jorg". On the
> university ne
* Joerg Johannes ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [031201 09:52]:
> Hi everybody
>
> Is it possible to use different login names on different machines in
> combination with passwordless ssh logins? My situation is the following:
Yes, the key setup is completely independent of the username. If it's
not workin
It seems this thread made its way onto usenet, and I reproduce the
text of an email exchange that resulted:
> On Wed, Mar 19, 2003 at 02:37:21PM +1100, (somebody) wrote:
> > Hi Pigeon,
> >
> > I just read your usenet thread
> > http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&threadm=2
* Pigeon ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [030215 20:05]:
> So, I rename 'identity' to 'id_rsa' and try again... IT WORKS!!! Huh?
> The authorized_keys on the host still ends in
> '/home/pigeon/.ssh/identity', which doesn't exist on either machine.
Well, this is unsurprising. The last field of a public key li
On Sat, Feb 15, 2003 at 08:50:29PM -0500, jereme wrote:
> Pigeon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Since protocol 1 is now working, I'm not too bothered about 2 not
> > working, but it would be nice to fix it purely on the grounds of not
> > liking to have broken stuff around especially when it works
On Sat, Feb 15, 2003 at 12:40:08PM -0800, Vineet Kumar wrote:
> * Pigeon ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [030215 11:03]:
> > Since protocol 1 is now working, I'm not too bothered about 2 not
> > working, but it would be nice to fix it purely on the grounds of not
> > liking to have broken stuff around especial
Pigeon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Since protocol 1 is now working, I'm not too bothered about 2 not
> working, but it would be nice to fix it purely on the grounds of not
> liking to have broken stuff around especially when it works for
> everyone else!
I see in your first message you combed th
* Pigeon ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [030215 11:03]:
> On Sat, Feb 15, 2003 at 11:28:12PM +0800, Sukanta Kumar Hazra wrote:
> > Hi!
> >
> > copy th id_dsa key to .ssh/authorized_keys2 and make sure the
> > permission mode is 600. ssh2 would work then.
> >
> > - Sukanta
>
> Thanks - but unfortunately, it
On Sat, Feb 15, 2003 at 11:28:12PM +0800, Sukanta Kumar Hazra wrote:
> Hi!
>
> copy th id_dsa key to .ssh/authorized_keys2 and make sure the
> permission mode is 600. ssh2 would work then.
>
> - Sukanta
Thanks - but unfortunately, it doesn't.
There was a previous thread on this, from Jan 19, co
On Sat, Feb 08, 2003 at 11:31:12PM -0800, Vineet Kumar wrote:
> * Pigeon ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [030208 20:16]:
> > > > debug3: Not a RSA1 key file /root/.ssh/id_rsa.
> > (and the same for id_dsa)
> >
> > Looking in these files, I find they don't look right compared to the
> > id_?sa.pub files. The .
* Pigeon ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [030208 20:16]:
> > > debug3: Not a RSA1 key file /root/.ssh/id_rsa.
> (and the same for id_dsa)
>
> Looking in these files, I find they don't look right compared to the
> id_?sa.pub files. The .pub files contain "ssh-rsa fv487t509n0etcetcetc=
> root@pigeon" all as one
On Fri, Feb 07, 2003 at 10:38:17PM -0700, Tim Ayers wrote:
> When you generate your keys and it asks for a passphrase, just hit
> . Don't use a passphrase and it won't prompt you for one.
No, that's how I did it. It's not asking for a passphrase, it's asking
for a password, just as if I had no ke
heya,
are you sure your sshd_config is configured to allow PubkeyAuthentication?
sean
On Sat, Feb 08, 2003 at 12:03:22AM +, Pigeon wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm trying to set up ssh to enable passwordless logins from
> 192.168.1.1 to 192.168.1.2. I have used ssh-keygen to generate key
> pai
On Sun, 2003-01-19 at 18:04, Jean-Marc V. Liotier wrote:
> On Sun, 2003-01-19 at 18:02, Christian Jaeger wrote:
> > Make sure that the user's home dir on the remote host is not group
> > writeable (and the .ssh subdir as well). sshd does some checks before
> > using some files.
>
> Yes, that was
On Sun, 2003-01-19 at 18:02, Christian Jaeger wrote:
> Make sure that the user's home dir on the remote host is not group
> writeable (and the .ssh subdir as well). sshd does some checks before
> using some files.
Yes, that was it. 'chmod 700 ~/.ssh' on the remote host solved the
problem. Thanks
Make sure that the user's home dir on the remote host is not group
writeable (and the .ssh subdir as well). sshd does some checks before
using some files.
Christian.
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On Sun, 2003-01-19 at 16:54, Colin Watson wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 19, 2003 at 04:34:44PM +0100, Jean-Marc V. Liotier wrote:
>
> Please show the output of 'ssh -vvv -l differentusername
> other.remote.end.net'. It works for me ...
Actually, only one remote host exhibits the behavior. Other hosts work
On Sun, Jan 19, 2003 at 04:34:44PM +0100, Jean-Marc V. Liotier wrote:
> Here is what I did :
>
> # Local end :
> cd ~/.ssh
> # Enter an empty password when prompted by the following command
> ssh-keygen -t dsa -f id_dsa
> scp id_dsa.pub remote.end.net:~/.ssh
> # Repeat last command for all remote
On Mon, 7 Jan 2002 03:06:39 -0500
Daniel Freedman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Not sure exactly what's going on here, maybe you just have some config
> option specifying this in sshd_config, but, according to the release
> notes on openssh.org, for version 3.0 of openssh, authorized_keys2 is
> now
On Mon, Jan 07, 2002, Patrick Hsieh wrote:
> > > In Debian A, I ssh-keygen the public key, scp and append to Debian B
> > > ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
> >
> > It seems that Debian now uses protocol version 2, so maybe you need to
> > add v2 key to ~/.ssh/authorized_keys2.
> >
>
> Thanks. I end up wi
> > In Debian A, I ssh-keygen the public key, scp and append to Debian B
> > ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
>
> It seems that Debian now uses protocol version 2, so maybe you need to
> add v2 key to ~/.ssh/authorized_keys2.
>
> --
> Alexey
>
> "Python is executable pseudocode, Perl is executable line-n
> In Debian A, I ssh-keygen the public key, scp and append to Debian B
> ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
It seems that Debian now uses protocol version 2, so maybe you need to
add v2 key to ~/.ssh/authorized_keys2.
--
Alexey
"Python is executable pseudocode, Perl is executable line-noise."
Quoth Christopher J. Morrone on 27 Oct, 1999:
> This is for the purpose of backups. I have public key of the machine
> which is doing the connecting in the backup user's authorized keys file,
> and the user that is doing the connecting is in the backup user's .shosts
> file. However, the machine
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