The reason we use the command below is because we need the md5sum value hash of the password. This means that we cannot use the md5sum
Change "yournewpass" to the pass you want to set
echo -n "yournewpass" | md5sum
Then you get the md5sum hash of whatever you entered eg. in this case "yournewpass"
5a9351ed00c7d484486c571e7a78c913 ........
This is usually because the Group Policy forbids that user or group from logging in.
run "gpmc" (not "gpedit.msc" as that is for local computer settings when you are not using Active Directory) or go to Administrative Tools and Group Policy Management.
Edit the default domain policy like below........
In Debian a lot of times SSH disables the root user to login by password by default. This means you will get an authentication failure as if you typed in the wrong password.
The logs also indicate the password is wrong but what is often the case is in the config file
Check /etc/ssh/sshd_config
cat /etc/ssh/sshd_config|grep -i permitrootlogin
Make sure it says:
PermitRootLogin yes
If not change it and restart SSH........
zenity is a nice utility as part of the gnome window manager that allows you to script from bash and retrieve the input from the user. It could also be helpful in just notifying a user when they login with a popup window.
I'll give an overview of what's available with zenity:
Application Options:
--calendar Display calendar dialog
--entry Display tex........
First of all I got this error after accidentally messing up my usergroup by using usermod -G user group
When I would login using SSHkeys it would fail:
sshd[2020]: Authentication refused: bad ownership or modes for directory /home/one
No worries, the fix is simple!
chmod g-w /home/use........
Here is the scenario you or a client have a remote machine that was installed as a standard/default minimal Centos 6.x machine on a single disk with LVM for whatever reason. Often many people do not know how to install it to a RAID array so it is common to have this problem and why reinstall if you don't need to? In some cases on a remote system you can't easily reinstall without physical or KVM access.
So in this case you add a second physical or disk or already ha........
In my case I could login with the initial install but I rsync'd everything over while preserving ownership and permissions to another RAID partition and booted from that.was fine before. The problem is that you are kicked out the second you login and the problem was SELINUX for some reason (perhaps it noticed something strange when it was moved to the new partition)
login: pam_unix(login:session): session opened for user root by LOGIN(uid=0)
login: ROOT LOG........
debug1: An invalid name was supplied
Cannot determine realm for numeric host address
debug1: Local version string SSH-2.0-OpenSSH_4.3p2 Debian-9etch3
debug1: An invalid name was supplied
Cannot determine realm for numeric host address
debug1: An invalid name was supplied
A parameter was malformed
Validation error
Solution, disable auth from the ssh client (this is a client side error)........