On 23 October 2001 at 12:48, "taufik" wrote:
> 
> i have some complication with ssh, i'm using ssh to connect to another =
> server this is the error that i get
> 
> "It is possible that someone doing something NASTY, someone could be =
> eavesdropping on you right now (MAN-IN-THE-MIDDLE ATTACKE)! it is also =
> possible that the DSA host key has just been changed, the fingerprint =
> for DSA Key sent by the remote host is ...
> add correct host key in /root/.ssh/known_host2
> offending key in /root/.ssh/known_hosts2:3
> DSA host key is change."
> 
> what should i do now?
> 
Well, you could just remove line 3 from /root/.ssh/known_host2 and
everything will be just fine ;-)  But do *not* do that!
As it says, the ssh client has stored the host key of your ssh-server
in a previous login attempt and now detects that the server reports
a different key. So, you simply have to find out why your server
reports a different key. If you know why, you can remove the wrong 
key from /root/.ssh/known_hosts2.

John
--
drs. John W. Graat - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - tel/fax: +31 243527252/92
AT Computing - UNIX Training & Consultancy, Nijmegen, The Netherlands

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