is it also possible to ignore/disable the registry of key, so that you
dont have to type "yes" for every new host you log on. And have to
modify the key if the machine is reinstalled..
Thanks
-Jai
Mike Ault wrote:
Thanks!
-----Original Message-----
From: redhat-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:redhat-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Rhugga Harper
Sent: Friday, November 11, 2005 6:35 PM
To: General Red Hat Linux discussion list
Subject: Re: Getting rid of return message in ssh
In your sshd_config file on the target system, set these as follows:
PrintMotd no
PrintLastLog no
As a sidenote, there are ways to do what you want to do w/o changing these
options. (I prefer to have PrintLastLog enabled)
I use perl and the Net::SSH:Perl module to monitor my systems, and this
module gives you flexibility on how you handle stdout, stdin, exit status.
There are raw modes where you can read/write directly to the sshd socket
connection.
-rhugga
On 11/11/05, Mike Ault <mike@xxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi All,
I need to be able to go from one host to another via ssh and not get back
any message other than the prompt for the second machine. If I get back
anything at all the process I am trying to run will fail. How do I turn
off
the cute little "Last Login" message? I already have it transparent as far
as passwords, just need to get rid of this last bit and I am ready!
Mike
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