On Tue, 2006-01-24 at 09:12 -0700, Craig White wrote:
On Tue, 2006-01-24 at 10:02 -0600, Les Mikesell wrote:
On Tue, 2006-01-24 at 09:25, Craig White wrote:
but sshd on CentOS 4 doesn't look there.
so I merely
cd /var/lib/nxserver/home/.ssh cp authorized_keys2 authorized_keys chown nx authorized_keys
et voila - login
Thanks for everyone's help
I can't believe that people didn't stumble into this installing freenx on CentOS as it simply cannot work out of the box without doing this or some other change in /etc/ssh/sshd_config
I'm pretty sure I have not changed anything related to sshd_config or the freenx setup, and mine has no authorized_keys and after a login I can see the access time has changed on /var/lib/nxserver/home/.ssh/authorized_keys2. # rpm -q openssh openssh-3.9p1-8.RHEL4.9 # rpm -q freenx freenx-0.4.4-1.centos4 I may have installed earlier versions and updated on this machine but I doubt if that matters. I'm still curious about that strace showing that /var/lib/nxserver/home/.ssh/authorized_keys2 did not exist from the app's perspective. Strace doesn't lie.
run the command on your system...
strace -p freenxpid -f -t -o /tmp/logfile
I would expect that you would get very similar results so you can satisfy your curiosity. Thankfully, I didn't travel down the path since it wouldn't have led to the solution of my problem.
as for authorized_keys v. authorized_keys2...
I am not an sshd expert, but clearly on my systems (2), it wants authorized_keys and both of these were clean installs of CentOS 4.1 and ultimately updated to CentOS 4.2 before I ever attempted freenx.
---- duh - the command I used was...
strace -o /tmp/logfile -f -t nxserver --restart
anyway, thanks for all the help last night Les
Craig