On Sat, Dec 01, 2007 at 09:59:53PM -0400, Jose Luis Rivas Contreras wrote:
> Ken Irving wrote:
> > On Sat, Dec 01, 2007 at 09:49:55AM -0500, phillinux wrote:
> >> I set-up a plain vanilla, samba (intranet) server for a computer lab in my 
> >> school. I've done this before with SuSE and have switched to Debian Net 
> >> install.
> >>
> >> I have the kids SSH into their accounts to change their samba passwords 
> >> but 
> >> the connection is now being refused by the server. there is no problem 
> >> accessing home folders.  I checked the /etc/services file and port 22 
> >> seems 
> >> to be open (not commented out).  What should I check next?
> > 
> > On some debian versions, not sure which, the default sshd needs an entry
> > for each user in /etc/ssh/sshd_config in the AllowUsers setting. 
> > 
> This is false. The need of this field in `sshd_config` it's _not_
> determined by the debian version. If you have this field then you have
> to fill it, if you don't want it just delete it or comment the field.

Whatever... I'm just trying to offer something to check, in case it
helps.   If it's not the default, I probably added it myself at some
point.  Sorry to spread misinformation.

Ken

-- 
Ken Irving, [EMAIL PROTECTED], http://sourceforge.net/projects/thinobject/
Hi=~/lib/thinob/Try/Hi; mkdir -p $Hi; ln -s /usr/local/lib/thinob $Hi/^
hi=$(tob Try/Hi.tob hi); echo -e '#!/bin/sh\nshift\necho Hello $*!'>$hi
chmod +x $hi; mkdir say; ln -s $Hi say/^; tob say.hi world


-- 
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to