seems like the port is not open. might be a firewall in between or the remote host is listening on a different port.
try the above to check if you can connect to port 22 of the remote host.
Besides doing some shell-script which loops through /etc/passwd, I was wondering if there was some command that would tell me, like an enhanced version of getent.
The Operating system is Solaris 10 (recent-ish revision) using Sun DS for LDAP. (5 Replies)
Hi Gurus,
I have a script that requires me to switch from local user to root. Anyone who has an idea on this since when i switch user to root it requires me to input root password.
It seems that i need to use expect module here, but i don't know how to create the object for this.
... (1 Reply)
I am running a useradd script, which works locally but I want to take some of that local information and send it to a remote system, ssh keys are set up between the two systems. I am attaching the script, look at the section titled
"Sending information to FTP2"
Removed attachment, added... (0 Replies)
I want to make a script to compare list of files in terms of its size on local & remote server whose names are same & this is required over ssh. How can I accomplish this.
Any help would be appreciated. (1 Reply)
I have a script like this (Yes, I know the DAY6 number isn't right - I'm just testing at this point):
DAY0=`date -I`
DAY1=`date -I -d "1 day ago"`
DAY6=`date -I -d "2 days ago"`
if
then
ssh root@synology1 nohup rm -rf "/volume1/Fileserver/$DAY6"
fi
I've tested the line to remove the... (5 Replies)
Hello,
I know for SSH'ing and running a local script is...
ssh -t user@servername < /path/to/localscript.sh
and with SSH'ing and SUDO'ing is...
ssh -t user@servername "sudo -u username ls -l /home/username"
My inquiry is how can I combine both, by SSH'ing and SUDO'ing but running... (4 Replies)
Hi Guys,
So what I am trying to do is :
Host A should do a SSH to Host B to F. Login to the remote host and gather the output of uptime and write to to a file in HostA.
So by the end of the script, HostA should contain a file that contains the uptime output of Host B,C,D,E,F.
Right now... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I need to switch from local user to root user in a shell script.
I need to make it automated so that it doesn't prompt for the root password.
I heard the su command will do that work but it prompt for the password.
and also can someone tell me whether su command spawns a new shell or... (1 Reply)
Hi everyone, after about 2 days of scratching my head on this one, I'm finally ready to punt this and ask for some actual help. Here's the situation. We have 1 server, that runs multiple VM's. To gain access to those VM's we ssh from host01 to the other vm hosts. For example when we first log... (4 Replies)
Hello,
i configured rhel linux 6 with AD directory to authorize windows users to connect on the system and it works.
i have accounts with high privileges (oracle for example) if an account is created on the AD server i would to block him.
I looked for how to do, for the moment all the... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: vincenzo
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT OSX
ssh-keysign
SSH-KEYSIGN(8) BSD System Manager's Manual SSH-KEYSIGN(8)NAME
ssh-keysign -- ssh helper program for host-based authentication
SYNOPSIS
ssh-keysign
DESCRIPTION
ssh-keysign is used by ssh(1) to access the local host keys and generate the digital signature required during host-based authentication with
SSH protocol version 2.
ssh-keysign is disabled by default and can only be enabled in the global client configuration file /etc/ssh/ssh_config by setting
EnableSSHKeysign to ``yes''.
ssh-keysign is not intended to be invoked by the user, but from ssh(1). See ssh(1) and sshd(8) for more information about host-based authen-
tication.
FILES
/etc/ssh/ssh_config
Controls whether ssh-keysign is enabled.
/etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key
/etc/ssh/ssh_host_ecdsa_key
/etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key
These files contain the private parts of the host keys used to generate the digital signature. They should be owned by root, read-
able only by root, and not accessible to others. Since they are readable only by root, ssh-keysign must be set-uid root if host-
based authentication is used. Note that ssh-keysign is not set-uid by default on Mac OS X.
/etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key-cert.pub
/etc/ssh/ssh_host_ecdsa_key-cert.pub
/etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key-cert.pub
If these files exist they are assumed to contain public certificate information corresponding with the private keys above.
SEE ALSO ssh(1), ssh-keygen(1), ssh_config(5), sshd(8)HISTORY
ssh-keysign first appeared in OpenBSD 3.2.
AUTHORS
Markus Friedl <markus@openbsd.org>
BSD August 31, 2010 BSD