I would suggest adding "-vvv" to your ssh command. The debugging
information will generally show you where the error lies. If that
doesn't get it, you can also change the LogLevel in
/etc/ssh/sshd_config from INFO (default) to DEBUG, restart sshd, and
look at your system logs.
On Wed, Oct 2, 201
I regenerated the server SSH keys, which are separate from the root user
SSH keys:
ssh_host_dsa_key
ssh_host_key
ssh_host_rsa_key
On Wed, Oct 2, 2013 at 5:02 PM, Chris McQuistion wrote:
> Curt, did you run "ssh-keygen -t rsa" to generate the RSA key on this new
> server? Did you include a pas
Curt, did you run "ssh-keygen -t rsa" to generate the RSA key on this new
server? Did you include a passphrase when it ran?
On Wed, Oct 2, 2013 at 4:48 PM, Curt Lundgren wrote:
> Thanks, Dave. I can reboot one of the clients in the morning, perhaps
> that will clear up the issue.
>
> Curt
>
>
We have checked the /root/.ssh/authorized_keys and /root/.ssh/known_hosts
files and cleared the old entries out of there. That was the first thing
to check and it usually fixes this sort of issue (replacing a server with a
new one). In this case, that didn't work.
On Wed, Oct 2, 2013 at 4:45 PM
You're welcome.
I did a quick google and the error you would be getting if my guess is correct
is "Host key verification failed" and multiple solutions are here:
http://askubuntu.com/questions/45679/ssh-connection-problem-with-host-key-verification-failed-error
The responses provide both the com
Thanks, Dave. I can reboot one of the clients in the morning, perhaps that
will clear up the issue.
Curt
On Wed, Oct 2, 2013 at 4:45 PM, Dave Manginelli
wrote:
> I'm at a client's site so I can't test this or be more specific but this
> sounds to me like the host key of the "old" machine is ca
I'm at a client's site so I can't test this or be more specific but this
sounds to me like the host key of the "old" machine is cached in the client
and it does not match the host key of the machine now residing at that IP.
You can test this by using the HostKeyAlias parameter when you connect
fro
I've just built a couple of CentOS 6.4 machines, and need to use a
no-password RSA key login to root. No flames please about logging in as
root.
Had it working on both machines, but when I changed the "main" IP address
so the new machine could take over for an ailing one, the login capability
was
On 10/02/2013 11:04 AM, Blake Dunlap wrote:
Kickstart is your friend in these kinds of situations. You can even give
it a ks link at boot pointing to a web server or something if you want
if you don't want to automate the entire process.
-Blake
Thank you Wesley, Chris, Blake and Mark for your
You should be able to create a totally custom layout that doesn't do
anything upfront for you. You may have to boot the install CD as 'linux
expert' to get anaconda to present the "Custom" layout, though. Note, this
is not the same as "Review before.." Checkbox option. With Custom, you
have to setu
Kickstart is your friend in these kinds of situations. You can even give it
a ks link at boot pointing to a web server or something if you want if you
don't want to automate the entire process.
-Blake
On Wed, Oct 2, 2013 at 10:58 AM, Chris McQuistion
wrote:
> It's on VMware, right? You can jus
It's on VMware, right? You can just boot up from another ISO file, if you
want. I think you might be able to boot up from "linux text" or something
on that CentOS install disk, to just get a command line (or the CentOS
LiveCD).
On Wed, Oct 2, 2013 at 10:47 AM, Howard White wrote:
> One of my
Hi Howard,
What version of CentOS is this? Do you have the /var/log/anaconda* you can
pass along? Have you tried using a kickstart file? You mentioned this a VM,
what is the hypervisor?
- wesley
On Wed, Oct 2, 2013 at 10:47 AM, Howard White wrote:
> One of my LEAST favorite things about Cent
*Sr. Linux Systems Engineer*:
Provide senior level systems engineering support for the development,
configuration, installation and maintenance of the clients systems and
technology components.
Very stable company that appreciates their people and have the benefits,
bonus and other amenities to
One of my LEAST favorite things about CentOS is its graphical installer,
specifically the partitioning tool. I want my disk laid out _MY_ way,
thank you very much. I may be wrong but at least I am consistent!
I've done my usual set of primary partitions and now I want sda4 to be
the rest of
15 matches
Mail list logo