Paul Howarth wrote:
On Sat, 2005-03-19 at 06:30 -0500, Claude Jones wrote:
Paul Howarth wrote:
On Fri, 2005-03-18 at 18:16 -0500, Claude Jones wrote:
Paul Howarth wrote:
| On Fri, 2005-03-18 at 00:59 -0500, Claude Jones wrote:
|| I got sftp working, today. I have two questions I can't seem
|| to answer: 1) I first got it going by using the command line
|| in a terminal window. For another reason, I happened to be in
|| root. I connected and was able to log in after clicking past
|| the warning message about the unknown key and putting in my
|| username and password. Later on, I discovered how to do this
|| with gftp, also from root. Later on, when I tried to do this
|| with my username, I couldn't get in, getting a message that
|| the key couldn't be identified or something - so, my first
|| question is, is it a good idea to be logging in as root, and
|| if not, how do get past the warning?
|
| Please post the exact error message you got. I would avoid
| logging in as root if at all possible.
|
ssh cj@66.
Here are the results from logging in as root vs as user:
From user:
The authenticity of host '66.225.207.87 (66.225.207.87)' can't be
established.
RSA key fingerprint is b1:29:73:c2:26:c6:1f:6b:83:5a:cd:80:bd:bd:2d:be.
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)? yes
Warning: Permanently added '66.225.207.87' (RSA) to the list of known hosts.
Connection closed by 66.225.207.87
Couldn't read packet: Connection reset by peer
Does a user account of the same name exist on the remote machine?
yes
Does logging in to the remote machine as "root" work?
ssh cj@66.
$ sftp root@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Yes. That's what I'm trying to figure out. I can log in as root, but not
as a regular user.
Can you ssh in as the regular user?
$ ssh 66.225.207.87
Paul.
Does it count if I do it locally? I mean on the machine itself? I'm at
home now, it's early morning here - I think you're in the UK, no?
Anyhow, I was able to ssh to my external IP on the machine itself. I'll
give it a try when I get to work, which will be in a few hours. One
other question - does it make a difference if I'm logged in as root or
user on the remote machine? Excuse me if this is too obvious...
--
Claude Jones
Bluemont, VA, USA