Thank youi.
G/
fbsd_user wrote:
The fact of life is there is no way to stop ssh logon attacks
as long as you have port 22 open to the public internet.
You all ready see ssh doing its job correctly by not
allowing unauthorized logons.
Review the questions archives, this subject has been beat
The fact of life is there is no way to stop ssh logon attacks
as long as you have port 22 open to the public internet.
You all ready see ssh doing its job correctly by not
allowing unauthorized logons.
Review the questions archives, this subject has been beat
to death the last 3 weeks.
There are
Hi Daniel
Thank you! If I read the manpage correctly, invoking AllowUsers
automatically changes the default behaviour and restricts access to only
those users specificied. That fits my needs exactly. (or at least my
current perceived needs :--))
Cheers, Graham/
Daniel Gerzo wrote:
Hi
On Sun, Mar 26, 2006 at 11:52:11AM -0800, Graham North wrote:
>
> Does this mean that there is a way to run ssh, but only allow certain users
> to use it. My default seems to have been that if someone has a username
> and password they can access ssh (except root as "PermitRootLogin no" is
>
Hi Graham,
Sunday, March 26, 2006, 9:52:11 PM, you wrote about:
> Does this mean that there is a way to run ssh, but only allow
> certain users to use it. My default seems to have been that if
> someone has a username and password they can access ssh (except root
> as "PermitRootLogin no" is th