Solaris 11 ssh on machine with multiple Ethernet ports
I have a server with 6 Ethernet ports. 4 are the the motherboard based 1 GBE ports and 2 are 10 GBE ports on NICs.
I have set these all up with static IP addresses and use the standard /etc/nsswitch.files. My IP addresses are
and so on till
I can ssh in as a user on any of the ports from net1 through net5. I can also telnet and rlogin through those interfaces.
However when I try and ssh in on net0 (192.168.1.82) there is this really long wait till the password prompt, and then I get a permission denied message.
This seems to fail on both sides. So if I log into my server (thorugh one of the interfaces that does allow a login and then try to go to some other machine on our network on the 192.168.1. subnet the exact same thing happens - it fails)
I can ping just fine on the 192.168.1. subnet, plus of course it is actively rejecting a password so I'm not sure if this is a hardware issue.
I did a netstat -an and saw that ntp was listening on 4 UDP ports for each interface. Is this insecure because they are UDP ports and I don't see them in a listen state, is that because they are just a client.
Thank you.
*.ntp Idle... (2 Replies)
Greetings!
I just managed to install Solaris 10 on a Sparc based machine. However, there might be a problem with the way ssh is configured.
I CAN ssh from the machine into another on the network (same subnet, as root), but then the newly installed machine CANNOT seem to accept incoming ssh... (2 Replies)
Hi!
I have two solaris 10 machines(say 10.1.1.1,10.1.1.2). i have installed rsync on 10.1.1.2,
10.1.1.1:::
Sun Microsystems Inc. SunOS 5.10 Generic January 2005
-bash-3.00$ ssh 10.1.1.2 "echo $PATH"
Password:... (4 Replies)
Hi,
I am unable to login into my terminal hosting Solaris 10 and get the below error message
"Server refused to allocate pty
ld.so.1: sh: fatal: libc.so.1: open failed: No such file or directory "
Is there anyways i can get into my machine and what kind of changes are required to be... (7 Replies)
Got a strange problem.
I have 4 Solaris servers all configured the same, Solaris 10 x86 update 10.
When I try to ssh from one Solaris 10 server to another server ssh hangs.
I have an identical server and when I try this everything works fine.
The weird thing is if I am root on the server... (1 Reply)
I want to SSH to 192.168.1.15 Server from my machine, my ip was 192.168.1.99
Source Destination was UP, with IP 192.168.1.15.
This is LAN Network there are 30 Machine's Connected to the network and working fine, I'm Playing around the local machine's because I need to apply the same rules in... (2 Replies)
Dear Concern,
I want to block all ports of a particular node (ip: 172.16.10.141) through iptables. My nodes ip addresses are as below:172.16.10.137
172.16.10.138
Please advise us. (0 Replies)
Hello Everyone,
Quick question, any short and fast way to locate and map the physical Ethernet ports on the physical server ?
Server with expansion box has around 12 ethernet ports (fibre and ethernet)
what is the quickest way to map or find out en0 represents which physical port ?
... (1 Reply)
Hi folks,
I am fairly a beginner when it comes to Solaris OS administration, but part of my job somehow has scope to provide L1-level of OS administration over a few solaris servers.
Now, we have a requirement to limit the number of simultaneous ssh logins/sessions to the server, sort of... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: engrcha
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
findsmb
FINDSMB(1) User Commands FINDSMB(1)NAME
findsmb - list info about machines that respond to SMB name queries on a subnet
SYNOPSIS
findsmb [subnet broadcast address]
DESCRIPTION
This perl script is part of the samba(7) suite.
findsmb is a perl script that prints out several pieces of information about machines on a subnet that respond to SMB name query requests.
It uses nmblookup(1) and smbclient(1) to obtain this information.
OPTIONS -r
Controls whether findsmb takes bugs in Windows95 into account when trying to find a Netbios name registered of the remote machine. This
option is disabled by default because it is specific to Windows 95 and Windows 95 machines only. If set, nmblookup(1) will be called
with -B option.
subnet broadcast address
Without this option, findsmb will probe the subnet of the machine where findsmb(1) is run. This value is passed to nmblookup(1) as part
of the -B option.
EXAMPLES
The output of findsmb lists the following information for all machines that respond to the initial nmblookup for any name: IP address,
NetBIOS name, Workgroup name, operating system, and SMB server version.
There will be a '+' in front of the workgroup name for machines that are local master browsers for that workgroup. There will be an '*' in
front of the workgroup name for machines that are the domain master browser for that workgroup. Machines that are running Windows for
Workgroups, Windows 95 or Windows 98 will not show any information about the operating system or server version.
The command with -r option must be run on a system without nmbd(8) running. If nmbd is running on the system, you will only get the IP
address and the DNS name of the machine. To get proper responses from Windows 95 and Windows 98 machines, the command must be run as root
and with -r option on a machine without nmbd running.
For example, running findsmb without -r option set would yield output similar to the following
IP ADDR NETBIOS NAME WORKGROUP/OS/VERSION
---------------------------------------------------------------------
192.168.35.10 MINESET-TEST1 [DMVENGR]
192.168.35.55 LINUXBOX *[MYGROUP] [Unix] [Samba 2.0.6]
192.168.35.56 HERBNT2 [HERB-NT]
192.168.35.63 GANDALF [MVENGR] [Unix] [Samba 2.0.5a for IRIX]
192.168.35.65 SAUNA [WORKGROUP] [Unix] [Samba 1.9.18p10]
192.168.35.71 FROGSTAR [ENGR] [Unix] [Samba 2.0.0 for IRIX]
192.168.35.78 HERBDHCP1 +[HERB]
192.168.35.88 SCNT2 +[MVENGR] [Windows NT 4.0] [NT LAN Manager 4.0]
192.168.35.93 FROGSTAR-PC [MVENGR] [Windows 5.0] [Windows 2000 LAN Manager]
192.168.35.97 HERBNT1 *[HERB-NT] [Windows NT 4.0] [NT LAN Manager 4.0]
VERSION
This man page is correct for version 3 of the Samba suite.
SEE ALSO nmbd(8), smbclient(1), and nmblookup(1)AUTHOR
The original Samba software and related utilities were created by Andrew Tridgell. Samba is now developed by the Samba Team as an Open
Source project similar to the way the Linux kernel is developed.
The original Samba man pages were written by Karl Auer. The man page sources were converted to YODL format (another excellent piece of Open
Source software, available at ftp://ftp.icce.rug.nl/pub/unix/) and updated for the Samba 2.0 release by Jeremy Allison. The conversion to
DocBook for Samba 2.2 was done by Gerald Carter. The conversion to DocBook XML 4.2 for Samba 3.0 was done by Alexander Bokovoy.
Samba 3.5 06/18/2010 FINDSMB(1)