On 03/08/07, Boaz Rymland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Amos Shapira wrote:
>
>
> Possible ways to handle:
>
> 1. Change port as others suggested - works great for me.
> 2. Make sure you can only authenticate using public/private keys.
> 3. Install "denyhosts", which adds attacking IP's to /etc/h
Amos Shapira wrote:
>
> Possible ways to handle:
>
> 1. Change port as others suggested - works great for me.
> 2. Make sure you can only authenticate using public/private keys.
> 3. Install "denyhosts", which adds attacking IP's to /etc/hosts.deny
> based on the sshd logs, also can synchronize in
On 03/08/07, Ravid Baruch Naali <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi List,
>
> Does any one else get this frequently?
> Some kind of automated program trying to log into my sshd, each time from
> a different IP address. off course (I hope) all of the users are invalid.
>
> Did any of you noticed it? a
this is very common, those stupid bots do it on every open ssh port they
find around.
given proper usernames and passwords, they are pretty benign imho, but they
flood the logs so much...
personally, changing the ssh port on my home machine eliminated the problem
completely.
On 8/2/07, Ravid Baruc
On 8/2/07, Ravid Baruch Naali <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi List,
>
> Does any one else get this frequently?
> Some kind of automated program trying to log into my sshd, each time from a
> different IP address. off course (I hope) all of the users are invalid.
>
> Did any of you noticed it? and
Hi List,
Does any one else get this frequently?
Some kind of automated program trying to log into my sshd, each time from a
different IP address. off course (I hope) all of the users are invalid.
Did any of you noticed it? and if so what are your solutions?
Thanks in advance
Ravid
--
Ravid Baru