> -Original Message-
> From: cygwin-owner On Behalf Of Matt Berney
> Sent: 24 March 2004 21:41
> To follow up on this thread, I have added the 'Domain
> Administrator' to the local 'Administrators' group and the
> original problem with the ssh session not having 'admin
> privileges', w
7;s comments. They were helpful.
>
> Matt Berney
> Software QA Engineer
> PolyServe, Inc.
>
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Matt Berney [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, March 18, 2004 4:39 PM
> To: Pierre A. Humblet; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Cc: Matt
helpful.
Matt Berney
Software QA Engineer
PolyServe, Inc.
-Original Message-
From: Matt Berney [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, March 18, 2004 4:39 PM
To: Pierre A. Humblet; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: Matt Berney
Subject: RE: sshd authentication question
Interesting hypothesis. Th
On Thu, 18 Mar 2004, Matt Berney wrote:
> Hmm...ok. I understand. I will create an 'strace_sshd' service on the
> server side and try this.
> [snip]
Before you invest all the effort, look at Pierre's responses.
> [off topic]
> BTW, how do I reply to this posting on the cygwin mailing list such
On Thu, Mar 18, 2004 at 02:24:25PM -0500, Pierre A. Humblet wrote:
>
> Here is another hypothesis. Cygwin gets the groups from a variety of
> sources during setuid(). One of them is a call to NetUserGetGroups
> to get the global groups from the logon server.
> Failure of that call does not call a
Hmm...ok. I understand. I will create an 'strace_sshd' service on the server side
and try this. To answer your other questions:
> Another step you can try first: There's a small chance that an
> Event Log entry has been created when the problem happens.
> I can't tell you how that might look l
On Thu, Mar 18, 2004 at 07:43:44PM +0100, Corinna Vinschen wrote:
> On Mar 18 10:29, Matt Berney wrote:
> > Thanks, I suspect that it is something in our environment that is causing this.
> > Specifically, how do I use the strace tool in this context? Can I substitute the
> > 'ssh' command with
On Mar 18 10:29, Matt Berney wrote:
> Thanks, I suspect that it is something in our environment that is causing this.
> Specifically, how do I use the strace tool in this context? Can I substitute the
> 'ssh' command with 'strace ssh' command?
Ooh, no. The interesting part happens on the serv
er time, we continue to experience intermittent sshd authentication problems in
> our environment. Every so often (~ 1.5% of the time, but enough to cause our
> automated tests to fail), admin privileges are not granted. Perhaps there is some
> setting in the /etc/sshd_config file that we ne
On Mar 15 09:50, Matt Berney wrote:
> Over time, we continue to experience intermittent sshd authentication problems in
> our environment. Every so often (~ 1.5% of the time, but enough to cause our
> automated tests to fail), admin privileges are not granted. Perhaps there is some
Over time, we continue to experience intermittent sshd authentication problems in our
environment. Every so often (~ 1.5% of the time, but enough to cause our automated
tests to fail), admin privileges are not granted. Perhaps there is some setting in
the /etc/sshd_config file that we need to
On Fri, Apr 05, 2002 at 03:28:56PM -0600, Chetan Tiwari wrote:
> Hi,
>
> This may be a basic question, but I was wondering if there was any way
> to setup the SSH Daemon so that it authenticates users based on a text
> file or a SQL database, rather than the default passwd file/NT security
> auth
Hi,
This may be a basic question, but I was wondering if there was any way
to setup the SSH Daemon so that it authenticates users based on a text
file or a SQL database, rather than the default passwd file/NT security
authentication.
I'd basically like to set up a private list of users who can a
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