Hello,
everything is commented because these are the default settings. If you want to
change a setting you'll have to uncomment and change it.
Regards
Hagen Volpers
-Urspr|ngliche Nachricht-
Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Im Auftrag von
Jerome Santos
Gesendet:
On Monday 26 March 2007 11:33 am, Jerome Santos wrote:
I have a few seperate users on my server, one user for which I want to
dissallow ssh login. Now I've read the man page for sshd and I've read a
lot of the documentation on this, but I'm still not clear one one point. By
default,
At 01:33 PM 3/26/2007 -0400, Jerome Santos wrote:
I have a few seperate users on my server, one user for which I want to
dissallow ssh login. Now I've read the man page for sshd and I've read a lot
of the documentation on this, but I'm still not clear one one point. By
default,
On Mon, Mar 26, 2007 at 01:33:17PM -0400, Jerome Santos wrote:
I want to add something like this:
AllowUsers user1, user2, user3
I added that in but also with an # in front like all the other
entries. Now I find that I can still ssh to the box with a user
acct that I didn't include in the
Hello,
On Mon, Mar 26, 2007 at 01:33:17PM -0400, Jerome Santos wrote:
[...]
I want to add something like this:
AllowUsers user1, user2, user3
AllowUsers is a list of user name patterns, separated by _spaces_.
Also take a look at the AllowGroups parameter.
--
Serge
Thanks for pointing me in the right direction, got it working properly now;
found out the hard way to separate users by whitespace only, NOT commas.
thanks
On 3/26/07, Serge Basterot [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
On Mon, Mar 26, 2007 at 01:33:17PM -0400, Jerome Santos wrote:
[...]
I
Others have mentioned the correct syntax already. One suggestion which
helps administration is to assign or revoke access (or other privileges)
based on groups rather than individual users. In otherwords, make the
users members of a group and grant that group access.
It helps scalability,
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