SSH

Nathan England nathan at nmecs.com
Tue Aug 12 17:49:11 MST 2014


Hi Michael,

it sounds to me like somewhere your permissions got messed up or the ssh 
server keys are invalid.

Check the following:

1) Your bmike1 permissions should be 600 on the files inside .ssh and .ssh 
itself should be 700
chmod 700 ~/.ssh
chmod 600 ~/.ssh/*

2) Maybe your hostname is in the /etc/hosts.deny file. Read that file on the 
machine you are ssh'ing to and make sure your other machines are not listed 
there.

3) Try recreating your ssh keys on the machine you are ssh'ing to.
rm /etc/ssh/*key*
ssh-keygen -A

Try it now... 


You ssh into the machine and certain metrics are read and then you are 
mounting the virtual kernel file systems and that is when things change and 
you cannot access the machine a second time. Not sure off the top of my head 
why that would be except maybe something in /tmp or /dev is being over-
written. Anyway, hope something there helps.



On Tuesday, August 12, 2014 04:24:26 PM Michael Havens wrote:
>  ssh_exchange_identification: read: Connection reset by peer
-- 
Regards,
Nathan England

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NME Consulting Services http://www.nmecs.com
Nathan England ( nathan at nmecs.com )
Systems Administration / Web Application Development
Information Security Consulting
(480) 559.9681



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