On May 11 12:20, Chip Olson wrote:
> sshd : PID 1364 : starting service `sshd' failed: execve: 1, Operation
> not permitted.
>
> Which tells me Administrator doesn't have the privileges to start
> sshd.
What does the event log show? In any case, you should not only check
permissions on sshd.exe,
On Wed, 11 May 2005, Chip Olson wrote:
> Quoth Igor Pechtchanski:
>
> > Read the above page again, please. If I understood your statement
> > correctly, you've edited /etc/passwd and /etc/group directly. This is not
> > *supposed* to have any effect, unless you use the appropriate Windows
> > to
Quoth Igor Pechtchanski:
> Read the above page again, please. If I understood your statement
> correctly, you've edited /etc/passwd and /etc/group directly. This is not
> *supposed* to have any effect, unless you use the appropriate Windows
> tools to adjust group memberships.
>From the NT Secu
On Tue, 10 May 2005, Chip Olson wrote:
> Quoth Larry Hall:
> >At 03:03 PM 5/10/2005, you wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> > I read in the archives that logging in with public-key authentication
> > can cause problems like this, and indeed, if I log in via ssh with -o
> > PubKeyAuthentic
Quoth Larry Hall:
>At 03:03 PM 5/10/2005, you wrote:
>
>
>
> I read in the archives that logging in with public-key authentication
> can cause problems like this, and indeed, if I log in via ssh with -o
> PubKeyAuthentication=no, the mount works fine (and reports my user's
For reasons too complicated to explain, I need to configure a Windows
2000 machine to mount NFS shares from a Cygwin sshd session. The NFS
mounting part of this is taken care of by Windows Services for Unix,
and I have User Name Mapping set up so that my Windows user account
mounts as its Unix cou
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