-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Je Lundo Marto 28 2005 03:34, Dirk Raeder skribis: > To sum up what you did: > > You created the dsa-key as user sandra and copied the public key to > sandra's authorized_keys. Yes.
> Now Sandra can ssh from her account to her > account on the same machine without a password. No, she can't, it doesn't work, check my commands and you'll see it is still asking for a password. > What you have to do for passwordless log in, which is rather insecure: > Create a dsa- or rsa-key for the user you want to open the ssh connection > from, probably your account. > Copy the public key to the file ~/.ssh/authorized_keys on the machine and > account you want to log in. That doesn't work either, if I copy the keys to lab, another computer in this same LAN, the results are the same. Since one computer is a better environment than two (easier to control), I wanted to make it work first from and to liv, for sandra. Thanks. - -- Pupeno: [EMAIL PROTECTED] - http://pupeno.com Reading Science Fiction ? http://sfreaders.com.ar -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.1 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFCR69AfW48a9PWGkURAsylAJ9i5jVfbqKvh1MUWgImN10AIgA7WACgk/hi Ev+M2H4mVZMYw+DH8WQdnsM= =GyPH -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- [email protected] mailing list
