> Is your username on the machine you are ssh'ing from the > same as your > username on the machine you are ssh'ing to? Never, usernames are different. > If your username locally is USERLOCAL, then "ssh -v > ipaddress" is > equivalent to "ssh -v USERLOCAL@ipaddress" or "ssh -v -l > USERLOCAL > ipaddress" Username is not "USERLOCAL" > If your usernames are the same, then the only way I can see > "ssh > ipaddress" failing while "ssh -l username ipaddress" > succeeds is if > your .ssh/config file has a specific username for that > machine set - > something like this: > # cat .ssh/config There is no file like config in .ssh directory. There is only one file here: "known_hosts" > Host > 1.2.3.4 > User > remoteuser > > The -l argument to ssh would override that, but without the > -l you > would be trying to "ssh -l remoteuser 1.2.3.4" > > -- > Sam -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines