On Fri, Jan 9, 2015 at 4:14 PM, Paul Wouters <p...@nohats.ca> wrote: > My systems are set up that way, you can't just ssh in from anywhere, you >> can only ssh in from machines that have your private key. If you try >> to log in without a pre-shared key, it won't prompt you for your unix >> password, it will just fail. >> > > If your public key authentication fails, it still prompts you for a > password but even if you have set a password it will reject it. This is > to prevent leaking configuration information (eg to avoid telling > attackers whether or not password based logins are allowed in the > machine)
I got a little confused here. I also have my server systems set up to only use keys. Is it possible to have that along with a "dummy" password prompt that always fails? If yes, which directives in sshd configuration accomplish that?
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