My best guess is that your Linux box isn't correcting determining what term type to use or some other core shell variable along those lines. SSH in normally and issue echo $TERM to see what it is. Add "env" to one your shell's startup file (.bash_login for example if you use bash). Compare env output from the normal SSH connection to the one through the router. Try switching your default shell on the Linux box to something else. I use bash.

You'll probably get better responses on a list specific to your Linux distribution's SSH daemon. I think that's where the problem most likely is.

Justin

Roy wrote:
I am trying to ssh from a 2811 to linux box.  I telnet to the Cisco and
issue

ssh -l root xx.xx.xx.xx

and I get the password prompt.  I enter that and then logon goes through
and I get the shell prompt.  The problem is that nothing I type seems to
get through to linux.
Is there some magic I am missing?
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