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Full Discussion: .rhosts and rsh command
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers .rhosts and rsh command Post 28930 by larry on Thursday 26th of September 2002 11:37:55 AM
Old 09-26-2002
.rhosts and rsh command

Hello all,

Ok. Here it the scope I have two Redhat 7.2 machine which I use to test things on. I have a home directory which is NFS mounted via NIS. I have a .rhosts file in the directory with the name of the machine and username, with permission 600. Be when I try to run a rsh command I get permission deny. I do not have anything in my hosts.allow, hosts.deny nor hosts.equiv. I'm stuck as to understaning why I'm unable to run rsh command. THANKS IN ADVANCE
 

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HOSTS.EQUIV(5)						     Linux Programmer's Manual						    HOSTS.EQUIV(5)

NAME
/etc/hosts.equiv - list of hosts and users that are granted "trusted" r command access to your system DESCRIPTION
The hosts.equiv file allows or denies hosts and users to use the r-commands (e.g. rlogin, rsh or rcp) without supplying a password. The file uses the following format: [ + | - ] [hostname] [username] The hostname is the name of a host which is logically equivalent to the local host. Users logged into that host are allowed to access like- named user accounts on the local host without supplying a password. The hostname may be (optionally) preceded by a plus (+) sign. If the plus sign is used alone it allows any host to access your system. You can expicitly deny access to a host by preceding the hostname by a minus (-) sign. Users from that host must always supply a password. For security reasons you should always use the FQDN of the hostname and not the short hostname. The username entry grants a specific user access to all user accounts (except root) without supplying a password. That means the user is NOT restricted to like-named accounts. The username may be (optionally) preceded by a plus (+) sign. You can also explicitly deny access to a specific user by preceding the username with a minus (-) sign. This says that the user is not trusted no matter what other entries for that host exist. Netgroups can be specified by preceding the netgroup by an @ sign. Be extremely careful when using the plus (+) sign. A simple typographical error could result in a standalone plus sign. A standalone plus sign is a wildcard character that means "any host"! FILES
/etc/hosts.equiv NOTE
Some systems will only honor the contents of this file when it has owner root and no write permission for anybody else. Some exceptionally paranoid systems even require that there be no other hard links to the file. SEE ALSO
rhosts(5), rshd(8), rlogind(8) Linux 1995-01-29 HOSTS.EQUIV(5)
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