On Mon, Jul 7, 2008 at 12:53 PM, MHR <mhullrich at gmail.com> wrote: > Okay, I've narrowed the problem down quite a bit. As previously > reported, in CentOS 5.2 I get this: > Well whyis port 544 and 543 getting connection refused in the logs on the server? Are you using kerberos? Are the tickets you getting forwardable? > $ cvs log Makefile > poll: protocol failure in circuit setup > cvs [log aborted]: end of file from server (consult above messages if any) > > Turns out this is a problem with rsh: > > $ rsh khan ls > connect to address 10.24.15.48 port 544: Connection refused > Trying krb4 rsh... > connect to address 10.24.15.48 port 544: Connection refused > trying normal rsh (/usr/bin/rsh) > poll: protocol failure in circuit setup > > Now, if I just reomtely login to khan (our cvs server), I get this: > > [mrichter at sushi ~]$ khan > connect to address 10.24.15.48 port 543: Connection refused > Trying krb4 rlogin... > connect to address 10.24.15.48 port 543: Connection refused > trying normal rlogin (/usr/bin/rlogin) > Last login: Fri Jul 4 18:19:01 from viper > [mrichter at khan mrichter]$ > > Voila - I'm logged in. > > Also, if I try an rsh from another machine (viper - FC1), I get this: > > [mrichter at viper mrichter]$ rsh khan ls > connect to address 10.24.15.48: Connection refused > Trying krb4 rsh... > connect to address 10.24.15.48: Connection refused > trying normal rsh (/usr/bin/rsh) > Desktop > Documents > Download > Music > Pictures > Public > Templates > Videos > bin > lane608 > rls_607 > temp.xml > > > So, what is it about rsh from CentOS 5.2 such that the kerberos > certification destroys its chances of success? Alternative question: > what do I need to tweak to make this work? > > Thanks. > > mhr > > PS: Google has lots of wrong answers on this, mostly really old and of > no use at all. > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > -- Stephen J Smoogen. -- BSD/GNU/Linux How far that little candle throws his beams! So shines a good deed in a naughty world. = Shakespeare. "The Merchant of Venice"