Thanks for the last tip about deleting the sshd user. I did that and
know everything works.
Just to summarize for anyone who is trying to get this working on Windows Vista
Open two cygwin shells - one in Administrator mode (right click->Run
Administrator mode), the other as a normal user
Uninst
Brian Dessent wrote:
Kevin Hilton wrote:
Let me just make sure I know what you are telling me to do, since I
already did this and it didnt make a difference. As an administrator,
I:
1. Delete the sshd user -- Ok I manually edited the /etc/passwd file
and deleted this user
No, I mean delete t
Kevin Hilton wrote:
> Let me just make sure I know what you are telling me to do, since I
> already did this and it didnt make a difference. As an administrator,
> I:
> 1. Delete the sshd user -- Ok I manually edited the /etc/passwd file
> and deleted this user
No, I mean delete the *user*, not
On Dec 23, 2007 7:19 PM, Kevin Hilton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks for the info, however I cant get over the hump. I believe the
> problem lies with the UAC, but I have no way of proving this. The
> sshd and sshd_server users are created. Now what?? The service will
> not start, and I h
Thanks for the info, however I cant get over the hump. I believe the
problem lies with the UAC, but I have no way of proving this. The
sshd and sshd_server users are created. Now what?? The service will
not start, and I have no debugging output to tell me why?? Is it
suggested I not use privi
Kevin Hilton wrote:
Should either the sshd or sshd_server user be part of the Administrator group?
You really shouldn't need to worry about the groups for these users. They
are created by the 'ssh-host-config' script with the required permissions
and groups. They should work for you as the
> QUOTE:
>
> You've got some indeterminate state of brokenness here. Delete the sshd
> user, delete the service, delete /var/empty, delete the sshd config
> files, recreate known good passwd and group files, and then just run
> "ssh-host-config -y" and let it create everything correctly. That is
>
QUOTE:
You've got some indeterminate state of brokenness here. Delete the sshd
user, delete the service, delete /var/empty, delete the sshd config
files, recreate known good passwd and group files, and then just run
"ssh-host-config -y" and let it create everything correctly. That is
all you shoul
Thorsten Kampe wrote:
> > > $ /usr/sbin/sshd -d -d -d -D
> >
> > That's a very bad idea.
>
> Kevin is obviously trying to debug things (noticed the triple "-d"?)
> so this is a really good idea...
I know what the sshd options mean, and no, it's really not a good idea
in the slightest. Trying to
* Brian Dessent (Sun, 23 Dec 2007 04:58:33 -0800)
> Kevin Hilton wrote:
> > Just another thing that I have noticed:
> >
> > $ /usr/sbin/sshd -d -d -d -D
>
> That's a very bad idea.
Kevin is obviously trying to debug things (noticed the triple "-d"?)
so this is a really good idea...
Thorsten
Kevin Hilton wrote:
> Just another thing that I have noticed:
>
> $ /usr/sbin/sshd -d -d -d -D
That's a very bad idea. The daemon requires privileges that normal
users (even administrators) don't have, so trying to run it like that as
a normal user is just a recipe for breaking things. And eve
Just another thing that I have noticed:
$ /usr/sbin/sshd -d -d -d -D
debug2: load_server_config: filename /etc/sshd_config
debug2: load_server_config: done config len = 210
debug2: parse_server_config: config /etc/sshd_config len 210
debug3: /etc/sshd_config:13 setting Port 22
debug3: /etc/sshd_co
Where to start??
I attempting to setup the sshd within Windows Vista. For this OS
documentation seems scant.
openssh version OpenSSH_4.7p1, OpenSSL 0.9.8g 19 Oct 2007
At this point I dont care about priviledge separation. I can use it,
or not. I attempted to setup the daemon using ssh-host-con
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