I have just installed ssh2 downloaded from ssh.com on my linux machine (host) and on several windows machines (clients). My linux machine has several users, say x,y,z. I originally installed and configured ssh2 as user x. I could then successfully access my linux machine from "ssh secure client" as any of root, x,y,z. I can also ssh sftp as y or z, but not root or x. Why not??? I thought that there may be some denial of root access and then also x since I had installed from there, so I tried re-installing from root. However, x was still distinguished from y and z as being unable to ssh sftp. I really want to ssh ftp as x. How can I do this? Why is x distinguished as a user from y and z?? Is there any "uninstall" program on the linux end so that I can start over from root, and not make x different from y and z?? Thanks. -- Carl H. Brans, BancOne/J C Carter Professor of Physics Loyola University, New Orleans, LA 70118 [EMAIL PROTECTED]; http://www.loyno.edu/~brans Voice: 504 865 3643 Fax:504 865 2453
