Works fine for me...
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]$ cat /etc/hosts.equiv
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]$ ypmatch trusted_hosts netgroup
mpd.trusted_hosts
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]$ ypmatch mpd.trusted_hosts netgroup
mpd.andc.trusted_hosts mpd.asdc.trusted_hosts mpd.bdc.trusted_hosts
mpd.mhdc.trusted_hosts mpd.svdc.trusted_hosts
And so on and so on.
You sure the problem is with hosts.equiv/.rhosts? You might be facing a
PAM issue...
Paul Krizak 5900 E. Ben White Blvd. MS 625
Advanced Micro Devices Austin, TX 78741
Linux/Unix Systems Engineering Phone: (512) 602-8775
Silicon Design Division Cell: (512) 791-0686
Collins, Kevin [MindWorks] wrote:
Hi,
it would appear that using an NIS netgroup entry in the .rhosts
or hosts.equiv files does not work as expected in RHEL5. Any hosts
included top-level netgroup work, but not in the sub-groups.
As an example, this allows server1, server2 and server3 to rsh in:
In netgroup:
linux (server1,,) (server2,,) (server3,,)
In .rhosts:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
while this only allows server2 to rsh in:
In netgroup:
linux sub1 sub2 (server2,,)
sub1 (server1,,)
sub2 (server3,,)
This is not the behavior I have seen in the past on previous versions of
RHEL (including RHEL3 where it working fine at the moment)... Has anyone
else seen this? I didn't find anything in bugzilla.
Thanks,
Kevin
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