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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Very big delay (about 300 sec) before autentification Post 302885201 by hicksd8 on Friday 24th of January 2014 06:18:46 AM
Old 01-24-2014
If I understand you correctly, clients experience a very long delay connecting to the Solaris box. So the fact that the Solaris doesn't use DNS is surely irrelevant. Question is what is the DNS setup of the clients.

What you describe has all the hallmarks of a DNS issue ie, name resolution delays (or possibly mis-routing on the network).

What if you telnet from a client giving the Solaris ip address instead of nodename?

What is the DNS environment that the clients are in????

Last edited by hicksd8; 01-24-2014 at 08:25 AM..
 

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SSH-COPY-ID(1)						      General Commands Manual						    SSH-COPY-ID(1)

NAME
ssh-copy-id - install your public key in a remote machine's authorized_keys SYNOPSIS
ssh-copy-id [-i [identity_file]] [user@]machine DESCRIPTION
ssh-copy-id is a script that uses ssh to log into a remote machine and append the indicated identity file to that machine's ~/.ssh/autho- rized_keys file. If the -i option is given then the identity file (defaults to ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub) is used, regardless of whether there are any keys in your ssh-agent. Otherwise, if this: ssh-add -L provides any output, it uses that in preference to the identity file. If the -i option is used, or the ssh-add produced no output, then it uses the contents of the identity file. Once it has one or more fin- gerprints (by whatever means) it uses ssh to append them to ~/.ssh/authorized_keys on the remote machine (creating the file, and directory, if necessary.) NOTES
This program does not modify the permissions of any pre-existing files or directories. Therefore, if the remote sshd has StrictModes set in its configuration, then the user's home, ~/.ssh folder, and ~/.ssh/authorized_keys file may need to have group writability disabled manu- ally, e.g. via chmod go-w ~ ~/.ssh ~/.ssh/authorized_keys on the remote machine. SEE ALSO
ssh(1), ssh-agent(1), sshd(8) OpenSSH 14 November 1999 SSH-COPY-ID(1)
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