On Jan 10, 2011, at 10:16 AM, Rasto Levrinc wrote:

> On Mon, January 10, 2011 3:34 pm, Vadym Chepkov wrote:
> 
>>>> 
>>>> It was not an issue before. Did -t somehow got lost in ssh call?
>>>> 
>>> 
>>> Yeah, I've removed it, because it was creating even bigger problems. If
>>> you want to use sudo you can't have requiretty option in sudoers
>>> config file.
>> 
>> Well, that's a bummer, requiretty is a "standard" setting in sudo shipped
>> by Redhat/Fedora:
>> 
>> #
>> # Disable "ssh hostname sudo <cmd>", because it will show the password in
>> clear. #         You have to run "ssh -t hostname sudo <cmd>".
>> #
>> Defaults    requiretty
>> 
>> 
>> And I think it is a legitimate concern.
> 
> Because of internal reasons with the Java SSH library I'm using and the
> way I am using it if I'd require the tty it would show the password in
> clear and at the moment I don't have better solution for it.
> 
>> 
>> 
>>> 
>>> Anyway there's fix for all your other problems :)
>>> 
>>> 
>>> http://oss.linbit.com/drbd-mc/dmctest-0.8.9.dev.2.jar
>>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Well, almost :)
>> 
>> 
>> DEBUG: Not using known_hosts file, because this is not a Linux.
>> (drbd.utilities.SSH$AdvancedVerifier)
>> 
>> 
>> So what it's not a Linux? :)
> 
> I am sorry to inform you, that you have a Mac :) Are you saying that there
> is ~/.ssh/known_hosts on Mac? In that case I'll enable it.

Yes, I have, and furthermore, why just Linux? What about all other *nixes ? I 
am pretty sure openssh has roots in BSD, not in Linux.
And if you have Cygwin environments installed, you would have it even under 
Windows.

Vadym




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