Hi all,
I know this query is a little out of date, but I was wondering if anyone had seen this before. I'm trying to upgrade ssh on one of my potato machines. But I always get this: # dpkg -i ssh_1%3a3.4p1-0.0potato1_i386.deb > (Reading database ... 35706 files and directories currently installed.) > Preparing to replace ssh 1:1.2.3-9.4 (using ssh_1%3a3.4p1-0.0potato1_i386.deb) ... > Stopping OpenBSD Secure Shell server: sshd. > Unpacking replacement ssh ... > Setting up ssh (3.4p1-0.0potato1) ... > Installing new version of config file /etc/ssh/ssh_config ... > Installing new version of config file /etc/init.d/ssh ... > Installing new version of config file /etc/pam.d/ssh ... > Creating SSH2 RSA keyssh-keygen: invalid option -- t > dpkg: error processing ssh (--install): > subprocess post-installation script returned error exit status 1 > Errors were encountered while processing: > ssh It *looks* like dpkg is trying to generate ssh2 keys using the previous version of ssh-keygen, rather than the latest version (which stands to reason, as the latest version isn't installed at this point). Unfortunately, the previous version of ssh-keygen doesn't support the -t option. The version I'm upgrading from is: SSH Version 1.2.27 [i686-unknown-linux], protocol version 1.5. Standard version. Does not use RSAREF. Im I missing an intermediate version of ssh, perhaps? Any thoughts? Cheers, Simon. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]