Hi, Up until a few weeks ago, I ran OpenSUSE Leap as my daily driver. I only recently moved to Tumbleweed, which seems to get more attention by the OpenSUSE developers. One of the things I did on my Leap system was reconfigure the SSH client in order to *not* send any environment variables. To do this, I opened /etc/ssh/ssh_config and found the relevant stanza: SendEnv LANG LC_CTYPE LC_NUMERIC LC_TIME LC_COLLATE LC_MONETARY LC_MESSAGES SendEnv LC_PAPER LC_NAME LC_ADDRESS LC_TELEPHONE LC_MEASUREMENT SendEnv LC_IDENTIFICATION LC_ALL I simply commented this out and reloaded SSH: # systemctl reload sshd I tried to do this with Tumbleweed, but I don't have an /etc/ssh/ssh_config file. Instead, I only have an empty /etc/ssh/ssh_config.d directory. So I guess my SSH client has all default values defined at build time. What would be an orthodox approach to prevent it from sending any environment variables ? Thanks & cheers from Austria, Niki -- Microlinux - Solutions informatiques durables 7, place de l'église - 30730 Montpezat Site : https://www.microlinux.fr Blog : https://blog.microlinux.fr Mail : info@microlinux.fr Tél. : 04 66 63 10 32 Mob. : 06 51 80 12 12