Hi, If it is ssh v1 then the configuration file is /etc/sshd_config, and the default configuration should allow any user to connect from anywhere. For ssh v2 then the config file is /etc/ssh2/sshd2_config. This is the server configuration (deamon). Ofcourse taking into considiration that the machine you are connecting to is not connected somehow via a switch/router, and the access list allows port 22 through! PS. Try default config, and work from there, always easiest. :) Does this make any sense? On Sun, Feb 01, 1998 at 05:58:25PM +0100, Security Webmaster OKDesign oHG wrote:
Hi folks, umm, I have a small problem. When setting up our server, I tried to get the best security as possible. Maybe I changed some config-file to fit our needs to allow ssh-logins only from specified users.(But I have no idea which file this was :-(( ) Now I want to allow another user to login using ssh. I made ssh-keygen for this user, entered the password, copied identity.pub to authorized_keys in the .ssh-directory. But when trying to login via ssh, servers sends permission denied. What else must be done ? TIA ---Stephan
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