Re: lug-bg: .rhosts
- Subject: Re: lug-bg: .rhosts
- From: stoev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (Julian Stoev)
- Date: Wed, 27 Oct 1999 22:11:10 +0900 (KST)
On Wed, 27 Oct 1999, Pavel Milev wrote:
> Hello Lug_bg,
> Kajete mi, pls, kakuv tochno e formata na faila
> .rhosts
> 10x predvaritelno !
> Best regards,
> Pavel mailto:milev_@xxxxxx
Az niamam rlogin i rsh na moia kompiutar i zatova niamam i man pages.
:))
Obache eto kakvo pishe Solaris. Ne triabva da ima razlika v Linux.
Each remote machine may have a file named /etc/hosts.equiv
containing a list of trusted hostnames with which it shares
usernames. Users with the same username on both the local
and remote machine may rlogin from the machines listed in
the remote machine's /etc/hosts.equiv file without supplying
a password. Individual users may set up a similar private
equivalence list with the file .rhosts in their home direc-
tories. Each line in this file contains two names: a host-
name and a username separated by a space. An entry in a re-
mote user's .rhosts file permits the user named username who
is logged into hostname to log in to the remote machine as
the remote user without supplying a password. If the name
of the local host is not found in the /etc/hosts.equiv file
on the remote machine, and the local username and hostname
are not found in the remote user's .rhosts file, then the
remote machine will prompt for a password. Hostnames listed
in /etc/hosts.equiv and .rhosts files must be the official
hostnames listed in the hosts database; nicknames may not be
used in either of these files.
--JS
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