hello All, Thanks a lot to all who responded. John Leadeham's suggestion was right on target!! > When you rsh from A to S, use the who command to see > precisely what (host) name it thinks A is using. It may be > that this does not match what is in .rhosts. > > John. I did "who" after logging in S. It didn't give me a fully qualified host name (which is what was mentioned in .rhosts). That was because, the machine had a local /etc/hosts file that mentioned the nickname first before mentioning the fully qualified domain name. Thanks John for your suggestion. It really saved me from pulling my hairs out. In retrospect, I think a lot of suggestions from other people pointed in the same direction as John's. It's just that I was not able to catch on to them. >>> Problem description: > > I recently created a .rhosts file in my home directory. The file > > mentions a number of machines (say, A, B, and C) from where I > > would like to log onto a solaris 8 machine (say, S). When I do > > rsh from machine A (running solaris 7) to S, I am prompted for my > > passwd. However, when I do rsh from machine B (running solaris 8) > > to S, I am able to get in without entering any passwd. I have > > checked a number of things (including /etc/pam.conf) but I didn't > > find any problem. > > Regards, Samir Goel gsamir@cs.Rutgers.EDU - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - "To do the expected is duty, is routine, is sometimes boring. To do the unexpected is creativity, is fun, is adventure, is rebellion. To be able to do both is genius, is balance, is love, is life." - K.V. Vihari - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - http://www.cs.rutgers.edu/~gsamir/Received on Fri Dec 14 20:55:28 2001
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