Alfred von Campe wrote:
[I'm reposting this with a couple of corrections/clarifications and also
to raise its visibility since I didn't get any responses last time :-)]
It's been a month since Larry Hall replied to my last post on this topic
(thanks, BTW), and this issue has bubbled up to the top again. I have
tried various ways to get the sshd service started as a domain user
(instead of the default local user "sshd_server") and can not get it to
work. What is the correct syntax to specify a domain user with
cygrunsrv? This is what I have tried:
cygrunsrv -I sshd -u "DOMAINNAME\USERNAME" -w PASSWORD -d "CYGWIN
sshd" -p /usr/sbin/sshd -a -D -e "CYGWIN=bin tty smbntsec" -y tcpip
This successfully installs the service, and if I look at it in the
Services control panel, it shows the correct username (DOMAIN\USERNAME),
but if I try to start the service I always get the error "The Cygwin
sshd service in Local Computer started and then stopped". If I
substitute sshd_server for the user and supply the correct password, the
sshd service starts correctly. But I want to start the service as a
domain user so that I can access network shares and resolve some build
issues with Visual Studio that are apparently caused by not being fully
authenticated.
Does it have to be a domain user? If not, create a local one and give it
the permissions outlined in '/usr/share/doc/cygwin/openssh.README' from the
"Important note for windows 2003 Server users:" section. Or just look at
what '/bin/ssh-host-config' does. If it has to be a domain user for some
reason, I guess you can try the above on the machine in question for that
user but I really don't know enough about how domain user permissions can
(or can't) be augmented on local machines to say how this will work (and I
don't have a domain to test against currently).
--
Larry Hall http://www.rfk.com
RFK Partners, Inc. (508) 893-9779 - RFK Office
216 Dalton Rd. (508) 893-9889 - FAX
Holliston, MA 01746
_____________________________________________________________________
A: Yes.
> Q: Are you sure?
>> A: Because it reverses the logical flow of conversation.
>>> Q: Why is top posting annoying in email?
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